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WHO REPORT

2011
GLOBAL
TUBERCULOSIS
CONTROL

WHO Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data


Global tuberculosis control: WHO report 2011.
1.Tuberculosis epidemiology. 2.Tuberculosis, Pulmonary prevention and control. 3.Tuberculosis economics.
4.Directly observed therapy. 5.Treatment outcome. 6.National health programs organization and administration.
7.Statistics. I.World Health Organization.
ISBN 978 92 4 156438 0

(NLM classication: WF 300)

World Health Organization 2011


All rights reserved. Publications of the World Health Organization are available on the WHO web site (www.who.int) or can be purchased from WHO Press,
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Cover design by Tom Hiatt, Stop TB Department. The image depicts the remarkable decline in TB incidence, prevalence and mortality in China between
1990 and 2010. See Box 2.5.
Designed by minimum graphics
Printed in France
WHO/HTM/TB/2011.16

Contents

Abbreviations

iv

Acknowledgements

Executive summary

Chapter 1. Introduction

Chapter 2. The burden of disease caused by TB

Chapter 3. Case notications and treatment outcomes

28

Chapter 4. Financing TB care and control

42

Chapter 5. New diagnostics and laboratory strengthening for TB

54

Chapter 6. Addressing the co-epidemics of TB and HIV

61

Chapter 7. Research and development

69

Annex 1.

Methods used to estimate the burden of disease caused by TB

75

Annex 2.

Country proles

87

Annex 3.

Global, regional and country-specic data for key indicators

111

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

iii

Abbreviations

iv

HBC

high-burden country of which there are


22 that account for approximately 80% of
all new TB cases arising each year

WHO African Region

HIV

human immunodeciency virus

AIDS

acquired immunodeciency syndrome

ICD-10

AMR

WHO Region of the Americas

International Classication of Diseases


(tenth revision)

ARI

annual risk of infection

IPT

isoniazid preventive therapy

ART

antiretroviral therapy

IRR

incidence rate ratio

BRICS

Brazil, the Russian Federation, India,


China, South Africa

LED

light-emitting diode

LPA

line-probe assay

CDR

case detection rate

MDG

Millennium Development Goal

CPT

co-trimoxazole preventive therapy

MDR-TB

CBC

community-based TB care

DOTS

the basic package that underpins the


Stop TB Strategy

multidrug-resistant tuberculosis
(resistance to, at least, isoniazid and
rifampicin)

NGO

nongovernmental organization

NTP

national tuberculosis control programme


or equivalent

PAL

Practical Approach to Lung Health

ACSM

advocacy, communication and social


mobilization

AFB

acid-fast bacilli

AFR

DRS

drug resistance surveillance or survey

DST

drug susceptibility testing

ECDC

European Centre for Disease Prevention


and Control

EMR

WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region

EQA

external quality assurance

ERR

electronic recording and reporting

EU

European Union

EUR

WHO European Region

FIND

Foundation for Innovative New


Diagnostics

GLC

Green Light Committee

GLI

Global Laboratory Initiative

PPM

publicprivate and public-public mix

SEAR

WHO South-East Asia Region

TB

tuberculosis

UNAIDS

Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/


AIDS

UNITAID

international facility for the purchase of


diagnostics and drugs for diagnosis and
treatment of HIV/AIDS, malaria and TB

USAID

United States Agency for International


Development

VR

vital registration

Global Fund The Global Fund to ght AIDS,


Tuberculosis and Malaria

WHA

World Health Assembly

WHO

World Health Organization

Global Plan Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015

WPR

WHO Western Pacic Region

GNI

XDR-TB

extensively drug-resistant TB

gross national income

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Acknowledgements

This report on global tuberculosis control was produced by a core team of 14 people: Annabel Baddeley, Hannah
Monica Dias, Dennis Falzon, Christopher Fitzpatrick, Katherine Floyd, Christopher Gilpin, Philippe Glaziou, Tom
Hiatt, Andrea Pantoja, Delphine Sculier, Charalambos Sismanidis, Hazim Timimi, Mukund Uplekar and Wayne van
Gemert. The team was led by Katherine Floyd. Overall guidance was provided by the Director of the Stop TB Department, Mario Raviglione.
The data collection forms (long and short versions) were developed by Philippe Glaziou, with input from staff
throughout the Stop TB Department. Hazim Timimi led and organized all aspects of data management, with support
from Tom Hiatt. Christopher Fitzpatrick, Ins Garcia and Andrea Pantoja conducted all review and follow-up of nancial data. The review and follow-up of all other data was done by a team of reviewers that included Annemieke Brands,
Hannah Monica Dias, Dennis Falzon, Christopher Gilpin, Christian Gunneberg, Tom Hiatt, Jean de Dieu Iragena,
Fuad Mirzayev, Delphine Sculier, Hazim Timimi, Wayne van Gemert, Fraser Wares and Matteo Zignol in WHO headquarters, and Suman Jain, Nino Mdivani, Sai Pothapregada, Lal Sadasivan Sreemathy, Alka Singh and Saman Zamani
from the Global Fund. Data for the European Region were collected and validated jointly by the WHO Regional Ofce
for Europe and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), an agency of the European Union
based in Stockholm, Sweden.
Philippe Glaziou and Charalambos Sismanidis analysed surveillance and epidemiological data and prepared the
gures and tables on these topics, with assistance from Tom Hiatt. Tom Hiatt and Delphine Sculier analysed TB/
HIV data and prepared the associated gures and tables, with support from Annabel Baddeley. Dennis Falzon analysed data and prepared the gures and tables related to multidrug-resistant TB. Christopher Fitzpatrick and Andrea
Pantoja analysed nancial data, and prepared the associated gures and tables. Tom Hiatt prepared gures and tables
on laboratory strengthening and the roll-out of new diagnostics, with support from Wayne van Gemert. Tom Hiatt
checked and nalized all gures and tables in an appropriate format, ensuring that they were ready for layout and
design according to schedule, and was the focal point for communications with the graphic designer.
The writing of the main part of the report was led by Katherine Floyd, with input from the following people: Philippe
Glaziou, Charalambos Sismanidis and Sai Pothapregada (Chapter 2); Dennis Falzon, Mukund Uplekar and Hannah
Monica Dias (Chapter 3); Christopher Fitzpatrick and Andrea Pantoja (Chapter 4); and Haileyesus Getahun and
Annabel Baddeley (Chapter 6). Chapter 5, on new diagnostics and laboratory strengthening, was prepared by Wayne
van Gemert, Christopher Gilpin, Karin Weyer and Fuad Mirzayev. Chapter 7, on research and development, was written by Christian Lienhardt and Katherine Floyd. The contribution to Chapter 3 of a case study about the engagement
of the full range of care providers in TB care and control in Nigeria by Joshua Obasanya, manager of the National TB
Programme in Nigeria, deserves special mention. Karen Ciceri edited the entire report.
Annex 1, which explains methods used to produce estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB, was written by
Philippe Glaziou, Katherine Floyd and Charalambos Sismanidis. The country pro les that appear in Annex 2 were
prepared by Hazim Timimi and Tom Hiatt. Annex 3, which contains a wealth of global, regional and country-specic
data from the global TB database, was prepared by Tom Hiatt and Hazim Timimi.
We thank Elizabeth Corbett and Jeremiah Chakaya for serving as external reviewers of the report.
We also thank Sue Hobbs for her excellent work on the design and layout of this report; her contribution, as in
previous years, is greatly appreciated.
The principal source of nancial support for WHOs work on monitoring and evaluation of TB control is the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID), without which it would be impossible to produce this report
on global TB control. Data collection, validation, analysis, printing and dissemination were also supported by funding
from the government of Japan and the Global Fund. We acknowledge with gratitude their support.
In addition to the core report team and those mentioned above, the report beneted from the input of many staff
at the World Health Organization (WHO), particularly for data collection, validation and review. Among those listed
below, we thank in particular Amal Bassili, Andrei Dadu, Khurshid Alam Hyder, Daniel Kibuga, Rafael Lpez Olarte,
Nobuyuki Nishikiori, Anglica Salomo, Marithel Tesoro and Daniel Sagebiel for their major contribution to data col-

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

lection, validation and review.

WHO headquarters Geneva


Pamela Baillie, Victoria Birungi, Reuben Granich, John Kirkwood, Tracy Mawer, Paul Nunn, Yves Souteyrand, JeanMichel Tassie and Diana Weil.

WHO African Region


Diriba Agegnehu, Shalala Ahmadova, Ayodele Awe, Gani Alabi, Joseph Imoko, Kalpesh Rahevar, Joel Kangangi, Hilary
Kipruto, Bah Keita, Daniel Kibuga, Mwendaweli Maboshe, Andr Ndongosieme, Nicolas Nkiere, Ishmael Nyasulu,
Wilfred Nkhoma, Philips Patrobas, Anglica Salomo, Kefas Samson and Neema Simkoko.

WHO Region of the Americas


Marcos Espinal, Mirtha del Granado, Rafael Lpez Olarte, Rodolfo Rodriguez, Yamil Silva and Alfonso Tenorio.

WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region


Ali Akbar, Mohamed Abdel Aziz, Samiha Baghdadi, Amal Bassili, Philip Ejikon, Sevil Huseynova, Ridha Jebeniani,
Wasiq Khan, Aayid Munim, Syed Karam Shah, Ireneaus Sindani, Bashir Suleiman, Khaled Sultan, Rahim Taghizadeh
and Martin Van Den Boom.

WHO European Region


Evgeny Belilovskiy, Pierpaolo de Colombani, Andrei Dadu, Irina Danilova, Masoud Dara, Jamshid Gadoev, Gayane
Ghukasyan, Ogtay Gozalov, Sayohat Hasanova, Gulshat Jumayeva, Bahtygul Karriyeva, Olena Kheylo, Mehmet Yavuz
Kontas, Kristin Kremer, Dmitry Pashkevich, Valentin Rusovich, Bogdana Shcherbak-Verlan, Javahir Suleymanova,
Vadim Testov, Gombogaram Tsogt and Richard Zaleskis.

WHO South-East Asia Region


Mohammed Akhtar, Erwin Cooreman, Puneet Dewan, Khurshid Alam Hyder, Partha Mandal, Ye Myint, Eva Nathanson, Rajesh Pandav, Sri Prihatini, Kim Son Il, Chawalit Tantinimitkul, Sombat Thanprasertuk, Supriya Warusavithana
and Namgyel Wangchuk.

WHO Western Pacic Region


Cornelia Hennig, Woo-Jin Lew, Catherine Lijinsky, Ngyuen Nhat Linh, Nobuyuki Nishikiori, Giampaolo Mezzabotta, Yamuna Mundade, Katsunori Osuga, Daniel Sagebiel, Fabio Scano, Jacques Sebert, Harpal Singh, Marithel Tesoro,
Catharina van Weezenbeek, Rajendra-Prasad Yadav and Liu Yuhong.
The main purpose of this report is to provide the latest data on the TB epidemic and progress in TB care and control
of the disease, based on data collected in the 2011 round of global TB data collection and previous years. Data are
supplied primarily by national TB control programme managers and their staff. Those who used the online data collection system to report data to WHO in 2011 are listed below, and we thank them all for their invaluable contribution
and collaboration.

WHO African Region


Oumar Abdelhadi, Jean Louis Abena, Juan Eyene Acuresila, Francis Adatu-Engwau, Soane Alihalassa, Inacio Alvarenga, Omoniyi Amos Fadare, Gnevive Angue Nguema, Claudina Augusto da Cruz, Fantch Awokou, Boubakar
Ball, Swasilanne Bandeira de Sousa, Adama Marie Bangoura, Marie Catherine Barouan, Jorge Noel Barreto, Frank
Bekolo Mba, Richard Betchem, Mame Bocar Lo, Frank Adae Bonsu, Marafa Boubacar, Mahamat Bourhanadine, Miguel
Camara, Evangelista Chisakaitwa, Nkem Chwukueme, Amadou Cisse, Catherine Cooper, Cheick Oumar Coulibaly,
Victor Manuel Da Costa Pereira, Isaias Dambe, Serge Diagbouga, Acha Diakite, Awa Helene Diop, Themba Dlamini,
Saidi Egwaga, Justin Freminot, Louisa Ganda, Michel Gasana, Evariste Gasana, Boingotlo Gasennelwe, Ntahizaniye
Grard, Sandile Ginindza, Martin Gninafon, Nii Hanson-Nortey, Adama Jallow, Abdoul Karim Kanout, Nathan
Kapata, Biruck Kebede Negash, Hillary Kipruto, Aristide Komangoya-Nzonzo, Patrick Konwloh, Jacquemin Kouakou, Felix Kwami Afutu, Egidio Langa, Bernard Langat, Llang Maama-Maime, Angelo Makpenon, Farai Mavhunga,
Momar Talla Mbodji, Marie-Lopoldine Mbulula, Azmera Molla Tikuye, James Mpunga, Clifford Munyandi, Lindiwe
Mvusi, Ronald Ncube, Fulgence Ndayikengurukiye, Thadde Ndikumana, Antoine Ngoulou, Emmanuel Nkiligi,

vi

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Ghislaine Nkone Asseko, Joshua Obasanya, Jean Okiata, Davidson Olufemi Ogunade, Aug Wilson Ondon, Hermann
Ongouo, Maria da Conceio Palma Caldas, Martin Rakotonjanahary, Thato Raleting, Bakoliarisoa Ranivomahefa,
Gabriel Marie Ranjalahy, F. Rujeedawa, Mohameden Salem, Charles Sandy, Tandaogo Saouadogo, Mineab Sebhatu,
Joseph Sitienei, Nicholas Siziba, Dawda Sowe, Celestino Francisco Teixeira, Mdard Toung Mve, Kassim Traore, Modibo Traor, Dawit Abraham Tsegaye, Mohamed Vadel, Fantch Wokou, Alie Wurie, Assefash Zehaie and Abbas Zezai.

WHO Region of the Americas


Marta Isabel de Abrego, Christian Acosta, Sarita Aguirre, Shalauddin Ahmed, Xochil Alemn de Cruz, Ral Alvarez,
Mirian Alvarez, Alister Antoine, Cecilia de Arango, Fabiola Arias, Wiedjaiprekash Balesar, Stefano Barbosa, Draurio
Barreira, Maria del Carmen Bermdez, Jaime Bravo, Lynrod Brooks, Violet Brown, Marta Isabel Calona de Abrego, John Cann, Maria Lourdes Carrasco Flores, Martn Castellanos Joya, Kenneth Castro, Roxana Cspedes Robles,
Gemma Chery, Jesse Chun, Sonia Copeland, Clara Cruz, Celia de Cuellar, Ofelia Cuevas, Dy-Juan De Roza, Richard
DMeza, Roger Duncan, Rachel Eersel, Mercedes Espaa Cedeo, Clara Freile, Victor Gallant, Julio Garay Ramos,
Christian Garca Calavaro, Jennifer George, Izzy Gerstenbluth, Margarita Godoy, Franz Gonzalez, Yaskara Halabi,
Yaskara Halabi, Dorothea Hazel, M. Henry, Alina Jaime, Ronal Jamanca Shuan, Hector Jave Castillo, Carla Jeffries,
Sharline Koolman-Wever, Ashok Kumar, Athelene Linton, Mara Josefa Llanes Cordero, Marvin Maldonado, Francisco Maldonado Benavente, Andrea Y. Maldonado Saavedra, Ral Manjn Tellera, Belkys Marcelino, Ada Martinez
Cruz, Maria de Lourdes Martnez Olivares, Zeidy Mata Azofeifa, Timothy McLaughlin-Munroe, Mery Mercedes,
Leilawati Mohammed, Jeetendra Mohanlall, Ernesto Moreno, Francis Morey, Alice Neymour, Persaud Nordai, Gisele
de Oliveira, M. Perry Gomez, Tomasa Portillo, Irad Potter, Bob Pratt, Edwin Quionez Villatoro, Dottin Ramoutar,
Leonarda Reyes, Anna Esther Reyes Godoy, Paul Ricketts, Adalberto Rodriguez, Maria Rodriguez, David Rodrguez,
Jorge Rodriguez De Marco, Myrian Roman, Katia Romero, Nilda de Romero, Joan Simon, R.A. Manohar Singh, Jackurlyn Sutton, Clarita Torres, Zulema Torres Gaete, Maribelle Tromp, Christopher Trujillo Garcia, William Turner,
Melissa Valdez, Reina Valerio, Daniel Vazquez, Eva de Weever, Michael Williams, Thomas Wong, Oritta Zachariah,
Nydia Zelaya and Elsa Zerbini.

WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region


Khaled Abu Rumman, Nadia Abu Sabra, Naila Abuljadayel, Khadiga Adam, Shahnaz Ahmadi, Mohamed Redha
Al Lawati, Fatma Al Saidi, Amin Al-Absi, Abdelbari Al-Hammadi, Samia Ali Alagab, Issa Ali Al-Rahbi, Abdul Latif
Al-Khal, Rashed Al-Owaish, Saeed Alsaffar, Kenza Benani, Abrar Chugati, Ahmad Chughtai, Walid Daoud, Sayed
Doud Mahmoodi, Suleiman El Bashir, Rachid Fourati, Mohamed Furjani, Mohamed Gaafar, Amal Galal, Dhikrayet
Gamara, Said Guelleh, Kifah Ibrahim Mustafa, Assia Haissama, Dhafer Hashim, Kalthoom Hassan, Ali Mohammed
Hussain, Heba Kamal, Joseph Lasu, Stephen Macharia, Alaa Mokhtar, Mulham Saleh Mustafa, Mahshid Nasehi,
Onwar Otien, Ejaz Qadeer, Mtanios Saade, Mohammad Salama Abouzeid, Khaled Sediq, Mohammed Sghiar, Kinaz
Sheikh, Mohamed Tabena and Hyam Yacoub.

WHO European Region


Elmira Djusupbekovna Abdrahmanova, Tleukhan Shildebayevich Abildaev, Rag Abuzarov, Aynura Ashyrbekovna
Aesenalieva, Natavan Alikhanova, Avtandil Shermamatovich Alisherov, Ekkehardt Altpeter, Nury Kakaevich Amannepesov, Peter Henrik Andersen, Delphine Antoine, Margarida Coll Armangue, Analita Pace Asciak, Gordana Radosavljevic Asic, Rusudan Aspindzelashvili, Andrei Petrovich Astrovko, Ewa Augustynowicz-Kopec, Elizabeta Bachiyska,
Ana Ivanovna Barbova, Venera Lazarevna Bismilda, Thorsteinn Blondal, Oktam Ikramovich Bobohodjaev, Olivera
Bojovic, Stefanos Bonovas, Eric Bttger, Hamza Bozukurt, Bonita Brodhun, Noa Cedar, Ismail Ceyhan, Ana Ciobanu,
Nicoleta Cioran, Radmila Curcic, Edita Valerija Davidaviciene, Liliana Domente, Manca Zolnir Dovc, Mladen Duronjic, Connie Erkens, Jos Even, Jennifer Fernandez, Akhmedov Tura Gafurovich, Viktor Gasimov, Catherine Guichard,
Larus Jon Guomundsson, Ghenadiy Lvovich Gurevich, Weber Guy, Walter Haas, Efrat Haddad, Hasan Ha zi, Armen
Hayrapetyan, Peter Helbling, Sven Hoffner, Daniela Homorodean, Elmira Ibraim, Djahonhir Dkurahovich Ismailov,
Vincent Jarlier, Maglajlic Jasminka, Mara Soledad Jimnez Pajares, Jerker Jonsson, Iagor Kalandadze, Kai Kliiman,
Maria Korzeniewska-Kosea, Mitja Kosnik, Gabor Kovacs, Olga Vladimerovna Krivonos, Tiina Kummik, Aliya Kurbanova, Arutiun Kushkean, Jean Lorenzi, Turid Mannsker, Merja Marjamki, Fauville-Dufaux Maryse, Wanlin
Maryse, Rujike Mehmeti, Narine Mejlumean, Donika Mema, Vladimir Milanov, Vladimir Milanov, A Mirziyat, Zohar
Mor, Nicolae Moraru, Gjyle Mulliqi-Osmani, Anne Negre, Joan ODonnell, Vibeke stergaard Thomsen, Dimitrijevic
Pava, Elena Pavlenko, Branka Perovic, Edita Pimkina, Monika Polanova, Bozidarka Rakocevic, Vija Riekstina, Elena
Rodrguez-Valn, Tom Rogers, Karin Rnning, Kazimierz Roszkowski, Sabine Rsch-Gerdes, Petri Ruutu, Eugeniy
Romanovich Sagalchik, Branislava Savic, Aynabat Amansahatovna Seitmedova, Hasia Kaidar Shwartz, Aleksandar

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

vii

Simunovic, Elena Igorievna Skachkova, Girts Skenders, Ivan Solovic, Dick van Soolingen, Petra Svetina Sorli, Olga
Mihailovna Stemlah, Janos Strausz, Silva Tafaj, Stefan Talevski, Odorina Tello Anchuela, Turaev Laziz Temurovich,
Medina Nazirdjanovna Tuichibaeva, Uzakova Gulnoz Tulkunovna, Aigul Sultanovna Tursynbayeva, Piret Viiklepp,
Ludmila Viksna, Cveta Vragoterova, Gerard de Vries, Maryse Wanlin, Guy Weber, Aysegul Yildrim, Maja Zakoska and
Hasan Zutic.

WHO South-East Asia Region


Sunil de Alwis, Si Thu Aung, Arjin Cholapand, Kim Jong Guk, Ashok Kumar Gupta, Emdadul Hoque, Jang Yong
Hui, Ashaque Husain, Kim Ting Hyok, Kashi Kant Jha, Suksont Jittimanee, Badri Nath Jnawali, Neeraj Kulshrestha,
Thandar Lwin, Dyah Erti Mustikawati, Fathmath Reeza, Chewang Rinzin, Aminath Shenalin, Paramita Sudharto and
Asik Surya,

WHO Western Pacic Region


Paul Aia, Cecilia Teresa Arciaga, Susan Barker, Christina Barry, Iobi Batio, Connie Bien Olikong, Nguyen Binh Hoa,
Kennar Briand, Richard Brostrom, Risa Bukbuk, Nou Chanly, Phonnaly Chittamany, Cho En Hi, Kuok Hei Chou, Jiloris Dony, Jane Dowabobo, Marites Fabul, Rangiau Fariu, Louise Fonua, Anna Marie Celina Gar n, Shakti Gounder,
David Hunsberger, Xaysangkhom Insisiengmay, Noel Itogo, Tomoo Ito, Nese Ituaso Conway, Narantuya Jadambaa,
Mayleen Jack Ekiek, Seiya Kato, Pengiran Khalifah bin Pg Ismail, Khin Mar Kyi Win, Leo Lim, Wang Lixia, Liza
Lopez, Henri-Pierre Mallet, Faimanifo Peseta, Sera Moa, Suzana Binte Mohd Hashim, Dinh Ngoc Sy, Fandy Osman,
Nukutau Pokura, Waimanu Pulu, Nasanjargal Purev, Yanjindulam Purevsuren, Marcelina Rabauliman, Bereka Reiher, Bernard Rouchon, Oksana Segur, Temilo Seono, Cheng Shiming, Tieng Sivanna, Ong Sok King, Grant Storey, Phannasinh Sylavanh, Kenneth Tabutoa, Markleen Tagaro, Cheuk-ming Tam, Mao Tan Eang, Ulisese Tapuvae,
Faafetai Teo-Yandall, Kazuhiro Uchimura, Rosalind Vianzon, Du Xin, Wang Yee Tang and Byunghee Yoo.

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WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Executive summary

This is the sixteenth global report on tuberculosis (TB)


published by WHO in a series that started in 1997. It provides a comprehensive and up-to-date assessment of the
TB epidemic and progress in implementing and nancing TB prevention, care and control at global, regional
and country levels using data reported by 198 countries
that account for over 99% of the worlds TB cases.
The introductory chapter (Chapter 1) provides general
background on TB as well as an explanation of global
targets for TB control, the WHOs Stop TB Strategy
and the Stop TB Partnerships Global Plan to Stop TB
20112015. The main ndings and messages about the
six major themes covered in the rest of the report are provided below.

The burden of disease caused by TB


(Chapter 2)
In 2010, there were 8.8 million (range, 8.59.2 million)
incident cases of TB, 1.1 million (range, 0.91.2 million) deaths from TB among HIV-negative people and an
additional 0.35 million (range, 0.320.39 million) deaths
from HIV-associated TB.
Important new ndings at the global level are:
 The absolute number of TB cases has been falling
since 2006 (rather than rising slowly as indicated in
previous global reports);
 TB incidence rates have been falling since 2002 (two
years earlier than previously suggested);
 Estimates of the number of deaths from TB each year
have been revised downwards;
 In 2009 there were almost 10 million children who were
orphans as a result of parental deaths caused by TB.
Updates to estimates of disease burden follow the completion of a series of consultations with 96 countries between
2009 and 2011, including China, India and 17 African
countries in the past year, and much greater availability
and use of direct measurements of TB mortality. Ongoing efforts to further improve measurement of TB cases
and deaths under the umbrella of the WHO Global Task
Force on TB Impact Measurement, including impressive
progress on TB prevalence surveys and innovative work
to strengthen surveillance, are summarized.
At country level, dramatic reductions in TB cases and
deaths have been achieved in China. Between 1990 and
2010, prevalence rates were halved, mortality rates fell

by almost 80% and TB incidence rates fell by 3.4% per


year. Methods used to measure trends in disease burden
in China nationwide prevalence surveys, a sample vital
registration system and a web-based case notication
system provide a model for many other countries.
Other results reinforce the ndings of previous global
reports:
 The world and all of WHOs six regions are on track to
achieve the Millennium Development Goal target that
TB incidence rates should be falling by 2015;
 TB mortality rates have fallen by just over a third since
1990, and the world as well as ve of six WHO regions
(the exception being the African Region) are on track
to achieve the Stop TB Partnership target of halving
1990 mortality rates by 2015;
 The Stop TB Partnership target of halving TB prevalence rates by 2015 compared with 1990 is unlikely to
be achieved globally, although the target has already
been reached in the Region of the Americas and the
Western Pacic Region is very close to reaching the
target;
 There were 3.2 million (range, 3.03.5 million) incident cases of TB and 0.32 million (range, 0.2044 million) deaths from TB among women in 2010;
 About 13% of TB cases occur among people living
with HIV.

Case notications and treatment outcomes


(Chapter 3)
In 2010, there were 5.7 million notications of new and
recurrent cases of TB, equivalent to 65% (range 6368%)
of the estimated number of incident cases in 2010. India
and China accounted for 40% of the worlds notied
cases of TB in 2010, Africa for a further 24% and the 22
high-TB burden countries (HBCs) for 82%. At global level, the treatment success rate among new cases of smearpositive pulmonary TB was 87% in 2009.
Between 1995 and 2010, 55 million TB patients were
treated in programmes that had adopted the DOTS/Stop
TB Strategy, and 46 million were successfully treated.
These treatments saved almost 7 million lives.
Alongside these achievements, diagnosis and appropriate treatment of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB)
remain major challenges. Less than 5% of new and previously treated TB patients were tested for MDR-TB in

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

most countries in 2010. The reported number of patients


enrolled on treatment has increased, reaching 46 000 in
2010. However, this was equivalent to only 16% of the
290 000 cases of MDR-TB estimated to exist among notied TB patients in 2010.

Financing TB care and control (Chapter 4)


In 97 countries with 92% of the worlds TB cases for
which trends can be assessed, funding from domestic
and donor sources is expected to amount to US$ 4.4 billion in 2012, up from US$ 3.5 billion in 2006. Most
of this funding is being used to support diagnosis and
treatment of drug-susceptible TB, although funding for
MDR-TB is growing and expected to reach US$ 0.6 billion in 2012. Countries report funding gaps amounting
to almost US$ 1 billion in 2012.
Overall, domestic funding accounts for 86% of total
funding, with the Global Fund accounting for 12%
(82% of all international funding) and grants from other
agencies for 2%, but striking contrasts between BRICS
(Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China and South
Africa) and other countries are highlighted:
 BRICS invested US$ 2.1 billion in TB control in 2010,
95% of which was from domestic sources;
 In the other 17 HBCs, total expenditures were much
lower (US$ 0.6 billion) and only 51% of funding was
from domestic sources.
Most of the funding needed to scale up the treatment of
MDR-TB towards the goal of universal access is needed
in BRICS and other middle-income countries (MICs).
If BRICS and other MICs fully nance the scale-up of
treatment for MDR-TB from domestic sources, current
levels of donor nancing for MDR-TB would be almost
sufcient to fund the scale-up of MDR-TB treatment in
low-income countries.
Donor funding for TB is expected to reach US$ 0.6 billion in 2012, a 50% increase compared with US$ 0.4 billion in 2006, but far short of donor funding for malaria
(US$ 1.8 billion in 2010) and HIV (US$ 6.9 billion in
2010).

New diagnostics and laboratory


strengthening (Chapter 5)
The rst data on the roll-out of Xpert MTB/RIF, a new
rapid molecular test that has the potential to substantially improve and accelerate the diagnosis of TB and drugresistant TB, are presented. By 30 June 2011, six months
after the endorsement of Xpert MTB/RIF by WHO in
December 2010, 26 of the 145 countries eligible to purchase GeneXpert instruments and Xpert MTB/RIF cartridges at concessional prices had done so. This shows
that the transfer of technology to developing countries
can be fast.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

The continued inadequacy of conventional laboratory


capacity is also illustrated:
 In 2010, 8 of the 22 HBCs did not meet the benchmark
of 1 microscopy centre per 100 000 population;
 Among the 36 countries in the combined list of 22
HBCs and 27 high MDR-TB burden countries, 20 had
less than the benchmark of 1 laboratory capable of
performing culture and drug susceptibility testing per
5 million population.
Overall, laboratory strengthening needs to be accelerated, as is currently happening in 27 countries through
the EXPAND-TB project supported by UNITAID.

Addressing the co-epidemics of TB and HIV


(Chapter 6)
Progress in scaling up interventions to address the coepidemics of TB and HIV has continued:
 In 2010, HIV testing among TB patients reached 34%
globally, 59% in the African Region and *75% in 68
countries;
 Almost 80% of TB patients known to be living with
HIV were started on cotrimoxozole preventive therapy
(CPT) and 46% were on antiretroviral therapy (ART)
in 2010;
 A large increase in screening for TB among people
living with HIV and provision of isoniazid preventive
therapy to those without active TB disease occurred in
2010, especially in South Africa.
Impressive improvements in recent years notwithstanding, much more needs to be done to reach the Global
Plan targets that all TB patients should be tested for HIV
and that all TB patients living with HIV should be provided with CPT and ART.

Research and development (Chapter 7)


The topic of research and development is discussed for
the rst time in the global report. There has been considerable progress in diagnostics in recent years, including
the endorsement of Xpert MTB/RIF at the end of 2010;
other tests including point-of-care tests are in the pipeline. There are 10 new or repurposed TB drugs in clinical trials that have the potential to shorten the treatment
of drug-susceptible TB and improve the treatment of
MDR-TB. Results from three Phase III trials of 4-month
regimens for the treatment of drug-susceptible TB are
expected between 2012 and 2013, and results from two
Phase II trials of new drugs for the treatment of MDR-TB
are expected in 2012. There are 10 vaccine candidates
in Phase I or Phase II trials. It is hoped that one or both
of the candidates currently in a Phase II trial will enter a
Phase III trial in the next 23 years, with the possibility
of licensing at least one new vaccine by 2018.

CHAPTER 1

Introduction
Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by
the bacillus Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It typically affects
the lungs (pulmonary TB) but can affect other sites as
well (extrapulmonary TB). The disease is spread in the
air when people who are sick with pulmonary TB expel
bacteria, for example by coughing. In general, a relatively
small proportion of people infected with Mycobacterium
tuberculosis will go on to develop TB disease; however,
the probability of developing TB is much higher among
people infected with the human immunodeciency virus
(HIV). TB is also more common among men than women, and affects mostly adults in the economically productive age groups; around two-thirds of cases are estimated
to occur among people aged 1559 years.
The most common method for diagnosing TB worldwide is sputum smear microscopy (developed more than
100 years ago), in which bacteria are observed in sputum
samples examined under a microscope. In countries with
more developed laboratory capacity, cases of TB may also
be diagnosed via culture methods (the current gold standard) or, increasingly, using rapid molecular tests.
Without treatment, mortality rates are high. In studies of the natural history of the disease among sputum
smear-positive and HIV-negative cases of pulmonary TB,
around 70% died within 10 years; among culture-positive
(but smear-negative) cases, 20% died within 10 years.1
Treatment using combinations of anti-TB drugs developed in the 1940s and 1950s can dramatically reduce
mortality rates. In clinical trials, cure rates of above
90% have been documented; the treatment success rate
among smear-positive cases of pulmonary TB reported
to WHO reached 87% at the global level in 2009.
Despite the availability of highly efcacious treatment
for decades, TB remains a major global health problem.
In 1993, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared
TB a global public health emergency, at a time when an
estimated 78 million cases and 1.31.6 million deaths
occurred each year. In 2010, there were an estimated
8.59.2 million cases and 1.21.5 million deaths (including deaths from TB among HIV-positive people).2 TB
is the second leading cause of death from an infectious
disease worldwide (after HIV, which caused an estimated
1.8 million deaths in 2008).3
WHO has published a global report on TB every year
since 1997 (Figure 1.1). The main aim of the report is to
provide a comprehensive and up-to-date assessment of

BOX 1.1
Goals, targets and indicators
for TB control
Millennium Development Goals set for 2015
Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria
and other diseases
Target 6c: Halt and begin to reverse the incidence of
malaria and other major diseases
Indicator 6.9: Incidence, prevalence and death rates
associated with TB
Indicator 6.10: Proportion of TB cases detected and
cured under DOTS

Stop TB Partnership targets set for


2015 and 2050
By 2015: Reduce prevalence and death rates by 50%,
compared with their levels in 1990
By 2050: Reduce the global incidence of active TB cases
to <1 case per 1 million population per year

the TB epidemic and progress made in prevention, care


and control of the disease at global, regional and country levels, in the context of global targets set for 2015
and WHOs recommended strategy for achieving these
targets.
The 2015 global targets for reductions in disease
burden (Box 1.1) are that TB incidence should be falling (MDG Target 6.c) and that prevalence and death
rates should be halved compared with their levels in
1990. WHOs recommended strategy for achieving
these targets is the Stop TB Strategy4 (Box 1.2), which
was launched in 2006 as an enhancement of the DOTS
1

Tiemersma EW et al. Natural history of tuberculosis: duration and fatality of untreated pulmonary tuberculosis in HIVnegative patients: A systematic review. PLoS ONE 2011 6(4):
e17601.
These deaths are classied as HIV deaths in the International
statistical classication of diseases and related health problems, 10th
revision (ICD-10), 2nd ed. Geneva, World Health Organization,
2007.
http://apps.who.int/ghodata. These HIV deaths include 0.4
million deaths from TB.
The Stop TB Strategy: building on and enhancing DOTS to meet the
TB-related Millennium Development Goals. Geneva, World Health
Organization, 2006 (WHO/HTM/TB/2006.368).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

BOX 1.2
The Stop TB Strategy at a glance
THE STOP TB STRATEGY
VISION

A TB-free world

GOAL

To dramatically reduce the global burden of TB by 2015 in line with the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs) and the Stop TB Partnership targets

OBJECTIVES

Achieve universal access to high-quality care for all people with TB


Reduce the human suffering and socioeconomic burden associated with TB
Protect vulnerable populations from TB, TB/HIV and drug-resistant TB
Support development of new tools and enable their timely and effective use
Protect and promote human rights in TB prevention, care and control

TARGETS

MDG 6, Target 6.c: Halt and begin to reverse the incidence of TB by 2015
Targets linked to the MDGs and endorsed by the Stop TB Partnership:
2015: reduce prevalence of and deaths due to TB by 50% compared with a baseline of 1990
2050: eliminate TB as a public health problem

COMPONENTS
1. Pursue high-quality DOTS expansion and enhancement
a. Secure political commitment, with adequate and sustained nancing
b. Ensure early case detection, and diagnosis through quality-assured bacteriology
c. Provide standardized treatment with supervision, and patient support
d. Ensure effective drug supply and management
e. Monitor and evaluate performance and impact
2. Address TB/HIV, MDR-TB, and the needs of poor and vulnerable populations
a. Scale-up collaborative TB/HIV activities
b. Scale-up prevention and management of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB)
c. Address the needs of TB contacts, and of poor and vulnerable populations
3. Contribute to health system strengthening based on primary health care
a. Help improve health policies, human resource development, nancing, supplies, service delivery and information
b. Strengthen infection control in health services, other congregate settings and households
c. Upgrade laboratory networks, and implement the Practical Approach to Lung Health
d. Adapt successful approaches from other elds and sectors, and foster action on the social determinants of health
4. Engage all care providers
a. Involve all public, voluntary, corporate and private providers through publicprivate mix approaches
b. Promote use of the International Standards for Tuberculosis Care
5. Empower people with TB, and communities through partnership
a. Pursue advocacy, communication and social mobilization
b. Foster community participation in TB care, prevention and health promotion
c. Promote use of the Patients Charter for Tuberculosis Care
6. Enable and promote research
a. Conduct programme-based operational research
b. Advocate for and participate in research to develop new diagnostics, drugs and vaccines

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

FIGURE 1.1

Fifteen annual WHO reports on TB in 14 years, 19972010


1997: First report:
epidemiology and
surveillance

2002: Added nancing and


strategy for 22 high-burden
countries (HBCs)

July 2009: Online data collection introduced


December 2009: Short update to 2009 report in transition
to earlier reporting of data and report publication

2003: Financing
and strategy
(all countries)

strategy. DOTS was a ve-point package that remains the


rst component and foundation of the Stop TB Strategy.
The other components of the Stop TB Strategy highlight
the need to address the challenge of drug-resistant TB
and the co-epidemics of TB and HIV, the importance of
engaging all care providers in TB care and control and
of contributing to strengthening health systems, the role
of communities and people with TB, and the fundamental role of research and development for new diagnostics,
new drugs and new vaccines. The Stop TB Partnerships
Global Plan to Stop TB for 20112015 has set out the
scale at which interventions included in the Stop TB
Strategy need to be implemented to achieve the 2015 targets for reductions in disease burden.1 The plan comes
with a price tag of US$ 47 billion and the main indicators
and associated baselines and targets are summarized in
Table 1.1.
This 2011 edition of WHOs annual global TB report
the 16th in the series continues the tradition of previous reports. It is based primarily on data compiled in
annual rounds of global TB data collection in which
countries are requested to report a standard set of data
to WHO.2 In 2011, data were requested on the following topics: case notications and treatment outcomes,
including breakdowns by age, sex and HIV status; an
overview of services for the diagnosis and treatment of
TB; laboratory diagnostic services; drug management;
monitoring and evaluation; surveillance and surveys of
drug-resistant TB; management of drug-resistant TB;
collaborative TB/HIV activities; human resource development; TB control in vulnerable populations and highrisk groups; TB infection control; the Practical Approach
to Lung Health; 3 engagement of all care providers in TB
control; advocacy, communication and social mobilization; the budgets of national TB control programmes
(NTPs) in 2011 and 2012; utilization of general health
services (hospitalization and outpatient visits) during
treatment; and NTP expenditures in 2010. A shortened
version of the online questionnaire was used for high-

income countries (that is, countries with a gross national


income per capita of *US$ 12 276 in 2010, as de ned
by the World Bank) 4 and/or low-incidence countries
(de ned as countries with an incidence rate of <20 cases
per 100 000 population or <10 cases in total).
Since 2009, data have been reported using an online
web-based system.5 In 2011, the online system was
opened for reporting on 15 March, with a deadline of
17 May for all WHO regions except the Region of the
Americas (31 May) and the European Region (15 June).
A total of 198 countries and territories accounting for
over 99% of the worlds estimated cases of TB reported
data by the deadlines, including all or almost all countries in ve of WHOs six regions (Table 1.2). Data were
reviewed, and followed up with countries where appropriate, by a team of reviewers from WHO (headquarters
and regional ofces) and the Global Fund. Validation of
data by respondents was also encouraged via a series of
inbuilt and real-time checks of submitted data as well as
a summary report of apparent inconsistencies or inaccuracies that can be generated at any time within the online
system. The data contained in the global TB database on
21 June 2011 were used for the main part of this report.
The detailed data in Annex 2 and Annex 3 reect the data
available on 2 September, the nal deadline for receipt
1

4
5

The Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015. Geneva, World Health


Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/STB/2010.2).
The annual data collection form is designed for collecting
aggregated national data. It is not recommended for collection
of data within countries. WHO recommendations for recording and reporting within countries are described at: www.
who.int/tb/dots/r_and_r_forms/en/index.html
The Practical Approach to Lung Health (PAL) is a patientcentred approach to improving the quality of diagnosis
and treatment for common respiratory illnesses in primary
health-care facilities.
http://data.worldbank.org/about/country-classications
www.stoptb.org/tme. Countries in the European Union
submit notication data to a system managed by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). Data
from the ECDC system were uploaded into WHOs online
system.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

TABLE 1.1

Summary of main indicators, baselines and targets set in the Global Plan to Stop TB 20112015
BASELINE
(2009)

TARGET
(2015)

5.8 million

6.9 million

Treatment success rate (in annual cohort)

86%

90%

Number of countries with 1 laboratory with sputum-smear microscopy services per 100 000 population

75

149

Percentage of previously treated TB patients tested for MDR-TB

7%

100%

Percentage of new bacteriologically-positive patients tested for MDR-TB

7%

20%

1821

36

36%

100%

11 000
60%

~270 000
75%

<1%

50%

PLAN COMPONENT AND INDICATORS


DOTS/laboratory strengthening
Number of cases diagnosed, notied and treated according to the DOTS approach (per year)

Drug-resistant TB/laboratory strengthening

Number of countries among the 22 HBCs and 27 high MDR-TB burden countries with 1 culture laboratory per
5 million population
Percentage of conrmed cases of MDR-TB enrolled on treatment according to international guidelines
Number of conrmed cases of MDR-TB enrolled on treatment according to international guidelines
Treatment success rate among conrmed cases of MDR-TB
TB/HIV/laboratory strengthening
Percentage of AFB smear-negative, newly notied TB cases screened using culture and/or molecular-based test
Percentage of TB patients tested for HIV

26%

100%

Percentage of HIV-positive TB patients treated with CPT

75%

100%

Percentage of HIV-positive TB patients treated with ART

37%

100%

~25%
<1%

100%
100%

<5%

50%

Percentage of people living with HIV attending HIV care services who were screened for TB at their last visit
Percentage of people living with HIV attending HIV care services who were enrolled on IPT; among those eligible
Laboratory strengthening (additional to those above)
Percentage of national reference laboratories implementing a quality management system (QMS) according to
international standards

AFB, acid-fast bacilli; ART, antiretroviral therapy; CPT, co-trimoxazole preventive therapy; HBC, high TB burden country; HIV, human immunodeciency virus; IPT, isoniazid
preventive therapy; MDR-TB, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.

TABLE 1.2

Reporting of data in the 2011 round of global


TB data collection
WHO REGION OR SET OF COUNTRIES

African Region

NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
AND TERRITORIES
REPORTING DATAa

46

45

Eastern Mediterranean Region

22

21

European Region

55

42

Region of the Americas

46

46

South-East Asia Region

11

10

Western Pacic Region

36

34

High-burden countries

22

22

216

198

WORLD
a

NUMBER OF
COUNTRIES AND
TERRITORIES

Countries that did not report data included Comoros (African Region), Libyan
Arab Jamahiriya (Eastern Mediterranean Region), Timor-Leste (South-East
Asia Region), Japan and Wallis and Futuna Islands (Western Pacic Region).
Countries that did not report in the European Region were mostly in Western
Europe.

of data from countries in the European Union.1 Besides


the data reported through the standard TB questionnaire, the report uses data about screening for TB among
people living with HIV and provision of isoniazid preventive therapy to those without active TB that are collected
annually by the HIV department in WHO, as well as data
and information that are available to WHO through separate mechanisms.
The report is structured in six major chapters. Each
chapter is intended to stand alone, but links to other
chapters are highlighted where appropriate. The six
chapters are:
 Chapter 2: The burden of disease caused by TB.
This chapter presents estimates of the numbers of TB
cases and deaths caused by TB in 2010, estimates of
trends in cases and deaths since 1990, and an assessment of whether the 2015 targets for reductions in
cases and deaths will be achieved. This is done for
the world as a whole, for WHOs six regions and for
1

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Countries can edit their data at any time. After the global
report is published, the most up-to-date data can be downloaded from WHOs global TB database (www.who.int/tb/
data). For most countries, there are few updates after the
global report is published.

each of the 22 high TB burden countries (HBCs) that


have been prioritized at global level since 2000.1 The
chapter also puts the spotlight on China, highlighting new evidence on impressive reductions in disease
burden between 1990 and 2010. Progress in improving measurement of the burden of disease under the
umbrella of the WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact
Measurement is also discussed, covering efforts to
strengthen TB surveillance and to implement national
population-based surveys of the prevalence of TB disease in around 20 global focus countries.

BOX 1.3
Whats new in this report?
The absolute number of TB cases arising each year is
estimated to be falling globally
Evidence of dramatic reductions in TB cases and
deaths in China between 1990 and 2010
Estimates of how many children become orphans as a
result of parental deaths caused by TB
Better estimates of TB mortality due to the greater
availability and use of direct measurements from vital
registration systems and mortality surveys

 Chapter 3: Case notications and treatment outcomes. This chapter includes data reported by NTPs
on the number of TB cases diagnosed and treated,
both overall and for multi-drug resistant TB (MDRTB) specically. Numbers of cases diagnosed and
treated are compared with the targets included in the
Global Plan to Stop TB. Progress in engaging the full
range of care providers in diagnosis and treatment is
illustrated, and estimates of the proportion of estimated incident cases of TB that were reported to NTPs
in 1995, 2000, 2005 and 2010 the so-called case
detection rate (CDR) are presented. The last part of
the chapter summarizes data on treatment outcomes,
both overall and for MDR-TB.
 Chapter 4: Financing TB care and control. This
chapter presents breakdowns of funding for TB prevention, diagnosis and treatment from both domestic
and donor sources for the 22 HBCs from 2002 to 2012,
and for a total of 97 countries for which trends can
be assessed since 2006. Breakdowns are provided for
categories of expenditure and by source of funding.
Funding gaps are quantied, and available resources
are compared with both the funding requirements
set out in the Global Plan to Stop TB and levels of
international funding for HIV and malaria. Countryspecic estimates of the cost per patient treated, and
how these are related to levels of average income, are
also featured.
 Chapter 5: New diagnostics and laboratory strengthening for TB. Laboratory strengthening including
the roll out of new diagnostic tests and policies are recognized as top priorities for TB care and control. This
chapter describes laboratory capacity in the 22 HBCs
as well as 27 high MDR-TB burden countries (a total of
36 countries, given overlap between the two groups).
It also assesses progress in efforts to strengthen laboratories, with particular attention to the EXPAND-TB
project 2 and the uptake of recent WHO policy guidance on diagnostics. Following the endorsement by
WHO of a new molecular diagnostic test for the rapid
diagnosis of TB and rifampicin-resistant TB at the end
of 2010 Xpert MTB/RIF progress in the roll-out of
this test is assessed. New policies on TB diagnostics

An important update to estimates of TB cases and


deaths in the African Region
Discussion of how synergies between the work of the
WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement
and the new grant architecture of the Global Fund have
the potential to substantially improve measurement of
the burden of disease caused by TB
Better data on the contribution of public-private and
public-public mix (PPM) to TB notications
Analysis of the funding required to scale up diagnosis
and treatment of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) in
BRICS (Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China
and South Africa), other middle-income countries and
low-income countries, combined with assessment of
how donor funding could be better used to support this
scale-up
Data on the roll-out of Xpert MTB/RIF for the rapid
diagnosis of TB and rifampicin-resistant TB following
WHOs endorsement of the test in December 2010
A chapter on the latest status of progress in developing
new TB diagnostics, drugs and vaccines

in 2011 and the evidence on which they are based are


also summarized.
 Chapter 6: Addressing the co-epidemics of TB and
HIV. Besides diagnosis and treatment of TB among
HIV-positive people, WHO recommends a range of
other interventions to jointly address the co-epidemics of TB and HIV. These include HIV testing among
all TB patients, provision of co-trimoxazole preventive
therapy and antiretroviral therapy for HIV-positive TB
patients, intensied case- nding for TB among people
receiving HIV care and isoniazid preventive therapy
for HIV-positive people without active TB. Progress in

These countries are (in alphabetical order): Afghanistan,


Bangladesh, Brazil, Cambodia, China, the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Kenya,
Mozambique, Myanmar, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines,
the Russian Federation, South Africa, Thailand, Uganda, the
United Republic of Tanzania, Viet Nam and Zimbabwe.
www.who.int/tb/publications/factsheet_expand_tb.pdf

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

scaling up provision of these services is described and


discussed.
 Chapter 7: Research and development. The most
commonly used diagnostic test for TB is over 100
years old, the anti-TB drugs used in rst-line treatments are around 50 years old and the BCG vaccine to
prevent TB is almost 100 years old. In the past decade,
efforts to develop new drugs, new diagnostics and new
vaccines have intensied. This chapter presents the
current status of progress.
Annex 1 explains the methods that were used to produce estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB.
Annex 2 contains country pro les for the 22 HBCs and
also highlights additional pro les that are available for
all countries online.1 Annex 3 contains summary tables
that provide data on key indicators for the world, WHO
regions and individual countries.

www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

CHAPTER 2

The burden of disease caused by TB

KEY MESSAGES
 There were an estimated 8.8 million incident cases
of TB (range, 8.5 million9.2 million) globally in 2010,
1.1 million deaths (range, 0.9 million1.2 million) among
HIV-negative cases of TB and an additional 0.35 million
deaths (range, 0.32 million0.39 million) among people
who were HIV-positive.
 In 2009, there were an estimated 9.7 million (range,
8.511 million) children who were orphans as a result of
parental deaths caused by TB.
 Globally, the absolute number of incident TB cases
per year has been falling since 2006 and the incidence
rate (per 100 000 population) has been falling by 1.3% per
year since 2002. If these trends are sustained, the MDG
target that TB incidence should be falling by 2015 will be
achieved.
 TB mortality is falling globally and the Stop TB
Partnership target of a 50% reduction by 2015 compared
with 1990 will be met if the current trend is sustained. The
target could also be achieved in all WHO regions with the
exception of the African Region.
 Although TB prevalence is falling globally and in all
regions, it is unlikely that the Stop TB Partnership target
of a 50% reduction by 2015 compared with 1990 will be
reached. However, the target has already been achieved
in the Region of the Americas and the Western Pacic
Region is very close to reaching the target.
 Dramatic reductions in TB cases and deaths have been
achieved in China. Between 1990 and 2010, prevalence
rates were halved, mortality rates were cut by almost
80% and incidence rates fell by 3.4% per year. In addition,
methods for measuring trends in disease burden in China
provide a model for many other countries.
 Between 2009 and 2011, consultations with 96
countries that account for 89% of the worlds TB cases
have led to a major updating of estimates of TB incidence,
mortality and prevalence, particularly for countries in the
African Region.
 Estimates of TB mortality have substantially improved
in the past three years, following increased availability
and use of direct measurements from vital registration
systems and mortality surveys. In this report, direct
measurements of mortality are used for 91 countries
(including China and India for the rst time).

The burden of disease caused by TB can be measured


in terms of incidence (de ned as the number of new and
relapse cases of TB arising in a given time period, usually
one year), prevalence (de ned as the number of cases of
TB at a given point in time) and mortality (de ned as the
number of deaths caused by TB in a given time period,
usually one year). It can also be expressed in terms of
the years of life lost or, to account for illness as well as
mortality, the disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) lost.
WHO publishes estimates of the burden of disease by
major cause and risk factor using all of these metrics.1
The rst three parts of this chapter present estimates of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality (absolute numbers and rates) between 1990 and 2010 and (for
prevalence and mortality) forecasts up to 2015. These
data are used to assess progress towards achieving the
global targets set for 2015: that incidence should be falling (MDG Target 6.c) and that prevalence and death rates
should be halved by 2015 compared with their levels in
1990 (Box 1.1 in Chapter 1). Key aspects of the methods
used to produce the estimates are provided at the beginning of each section; a detailed description is provided in
Annex 1.2 Section 2.4 focuses on multidrug-resistant TB
(MDR-TB), providing estimates of the number of cases
of MDR-TB in 2010 and a new analysis of trends in such
cases at global and regional levels.
There is uncertainty in all estimates of the burden
of disease caused by TB (Box 2.1). The nal part of the
chapter pro les efforts to improve measurement of the
burden of disease caused by TB under the umbrella of
the WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement. These include efforts to strengthen surveillance
of cases and deaths via notication and vital registration
(VR) systems, and national surveys of the prevalence of
TB disease in global focus countries.
The chapter also puts the spotlight on China, where
considerable efforts to measure the burden of disease
1

World Health Statistics 2010. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2010 (WA 900.1).
Methods were fully updated in 2009 following 18 months of
work by an expert group convened by the WHO Global Task
Force on TB Impact Measurement. Improvements included
systematic documentation of expert opinion and uncertainty
intervals, simplication of models, updates to parameter values based on the results of literature reviews and much greater use of mortality data from vital registration systems. For
further details, see the Task Force web site at: www.who.int/
tb/advisory_bodies/impact_measurement_taskforce

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

FIGURE 2.1

BOX 2.1
Uncertainty in estimates of TB incidence,
prevalence and mortality
TB incidence has never been directly measured at national
level, since this would require long-term studies among
large cohorts of people (hundreds of thousands) at high
cost and with challenging logistics. In countries with a
high burden of TB, prevalence can be directly measured in
nationwide surveys using sample sizes of around 50 000
people and costs in the range of US$ 14 million per survey.1 Relatively few countries with a high burden of TB have
conducted prevalence surveys in recent years (although
this is now changing), and sample sizes and costs become
prohibitive in low and medium-burden countries. TB mortality among HIV-negative people can be directly measured
if national vital registration (VR) systems of high coverage
in which causes of death are accurately coded according to
the latest revision of the international classication of diseases (ICD-10) are in place (and sample VR systems covering representative areas of the country provide an interim
solution). Mortality surveys can also be used to directly
measure deaths caused by TB. In 2010, most countries with
a high burden of TB lacked national or sample VR systems
and few had conducted mortality surveys. TB mortality
among HIV-positive people is hard to measure even when
VR is in place, since deaths among HIV-positive people are
coded as HIV deaths and contributory causes (such as TB)
are often not reliably recorded.
For all these reasons, the estimates of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality included in this chapter are presented
with uncertainty intervals. When ranges are presented, the
lower and higher numbers correspond to the 2.5th and
97.5th centiles of the outcome distributions (generally produced by simulations). The methods used to produce best
estimates and uncertainty intervals are described in detail
in Annex 1.
1 Improvements to the estimates published in
this report compared with previous years are proled in
Box 2.
2.2 and Box 2.
2.3.
1

TB prevalence surveys: a handbook. Geneva, World Health


Organization, 2011 (WHO/HTM/TB/2010.17).

caused by TB have been made over the past 20 years.


The impressive results and the methods used to produce
them which provide a model for many other countries
are highlighted as a special case study.

2.1

Estimates of the incidence of TB

The incidence of TB cannot be measured directly (Box


2.1). For 96 countries that account for 89% of the worlds
TB cases, estimates were thoroughly reviewed and updated between 2009 and 2011 in either regional or country
workshops (Figure 2.1). This was done using a framework
(Figure 2.2) and associated tools developed by the WHO
Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement. In-depth
analyses of the available surveillance, survey and programmatic data were undertaken, and expert opinion
about the fraction of cases diagnosed but not reported, or

10

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Progress in applying the Task Force framework for


assessment of TB surveillance data, as of July 2011a

All countries shown in orange participated in regional workshops held from


April 2009 to June 2010, with the exception of the United Republic of Tanzania
where a country mission was undertaken in October 2009 and India where
three country missions were undertaken between April and July 2011. As
follow-up to the regional workshop held for countries in the Western Pacic
Region in June 2010, a national workshop was also held in China in June 2011.
Further details about these workshops are provided in ANNEX 1.

not diagnosed at all, was documented. Reliance on expert


opinion is one of the reasons for uncertainty in estimates
(Box 2.1); strengthening of surveillance and better quantication of under-reporting (i.e. the number of cases
that are missed by surveillance systems) are needed to
reduce this uncertainty (efforts to do this are discussed
in section 2.5).
When the 2010 global report was published, 78 countries had been covered by regional or country workshops. Between November 2010 and July 2011, a further
17 countries in the African Region as well as India were
covered, and a national-level workshop was held in China
as follow-up to a regional workshop held in June 2010.
Major revisions were made for most African countries
(Box 2.2); these explain why the global estimates of cases
(as well as deaths) that appear in this report not only
for 2010 compared with 2009, but also for the time-series
dating back to 1990 are lower than those published in
previous reports. For countries not covered in workshops, estimates are based on extending previous timeseries (see Annex 1 for details).
In 2010, there were an estimated 8.8 million incident
cases of TB (range, 8.5 million9.2 million) globally,
equivalent to 128 cases per 100 000 population (Table 2.1,
Table 2.2, Figure 2.3). Most of the estimated number of
cases in 2010 occurred in Asia (59%) and Africa (26%);1
smaller proportions of cases occurred in the Eastern
Mediterranean Region (7%), the European Region (5%)
and the Region of the Americas (3%). The 22 HBCs that
have been given highest priority at the global level since
2000 (listed in Table 2.1 and Table 2.2) accounted for 81%
1

Asia refers to the WHO regions of South-East Asia and the


Western Pacic. Africa means the WHO African Region.

FIGURE 2.2

Framework for assessment of TB surveillance data (notication and vital registration data)

DATA QUALITY

TRENDS
Do surveillance data reect
trends in incidence and
mortality?

ARE ALL CASES AND


DEATHS CAPTURED IN
SURVEILLANCE DATA?

Completeness
No duplications, no misclassications
Internal and external consistency

IMPROVE surveillance system

Analyse time-changes in notications and


deaths alongside changes in e.g. casending, case denitions, HIV prevalence
and other determinants

EVALUATE trends and impact of TB control

UPDATE estimates of TB incidence and mortality

Onion model
Inventory studies
Capture re-capture studies
Prevalence surveys
Innovative operational research

notications ~ incidence
VR mortality data ~ deaths

If appropriate, CERTIFY TB surveillance data as


a direct measure of TB incidence and mortality

BOX 2.2
Revision of estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB in African countries
This report includes improved estimates of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality for countries in the African Region, following
consultations with representatives from 17 countries during a ve-day workshop held in Zimbabwe in December 2010. It was the
rst such workshop held in the African region for more than 10 years. In the interim, country missions were used to review and
update estimates for Kenya (in 2006) and the United Republic of Tanzania (in 2009). Participants at the workshop represented
the following countries: Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cte dIvoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana,
Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Before the workshop, estimates of TB incidence were mostly based on assessments of the fraction of incident cases captured
in notication data in the late 1990s. With the analysis of detailed national and sub-national surveillance data undertaken in the
workshop, previous assumptions were found to be overestimating cases (and in turn, prevalence and mortality). Estimates of
the proportion of cases being diagnosed and reported to national TB control programmes (NTPs) were heavily revised, mostly
upwards; that is, fewer incident cases were assessed as being missed by NTPs. Following the workshop, the number of incident
cases in the African Region was estimated at 2.3 million in 2010 (range, 2.1 million2.5 million) and the number of deaths caused
by TB (including those among HIV-positive people) was estimated at 254 000 (range, 227 000282 000).
As with previous workshops in other regions, considerable attention was also given to assessments of surveillance systems.
Recommendations for strengthening surveillance to move towards the ultimate goal of directly measuring cases and deaths from
notication and VR data were dened.
A full report of the workshop in Zimbabwe can be found at:
www.who.int/tb/advisory_bodies/impact_measurement_taskforce/meetings

of all estimated cases worldwide. The five countries with


the largest number of incident cases in 2010 were India
(2.0 million2.5 million), China (0.9 million1.2 million),
South Africa (0.40 million0.59 million), Indonesia (0.37
million0.54 million) and Pakistan (0.33 million0.48
million). India alone accounted for an estimated one
quarter (26%) of all TB cases worldwide, and China and
India combined accounted for 38%.
Of the 8.8 million incident cases in 2010, 1.0 mil-

lion1.2 million (1214%) were among people living with


HIV, with a best estimate of 1.1 million (13%) (Table 2.1).
The proportion of TB cases coinfected with HIV is highest in countries in the African Region (Figure 2.4); overall, the African Region accounted for 82% of TB cases
among people living with HIV.
Globally, incidence rates fell slowly from 1990 to
around 1997, and then increased up to around 2001 as
the number of TB cases in Africa was driven upwards by

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

11

TABLE 2.1

Estimated epidemiological burden of TB, 2010. Numbers in thousandsa


MORTALITYb
POPULATION

BEST

LOW

Afghanistan

31 412

12

Bangladesh

148 692

64

Brazil

194 946

5.0

3.1

14 138

8.6

6.2

Cambodia
China

1 341 335

54

8.6
47

PREVALENCE
HIGH

BEST

LOW

INCIDENCE
HIGH

BEST

LOW

HIV-POSITIVE INCIDENT TB CASES


HIGH

BEST

LOW

HIGH

16

110

51

180

59

49

71

85

610

280

1 000

330

270

400

0.7

0.3

1.1

92

34

160

85

70

100

12

8.3

93

42

150

62

53

72

18

52

56

1 500

1 300

1 700

1 000

910

1 200

18
18

4.0

15
3.4
10

22
4.7
28

DR Congo

65 966

36

27

45

350

160

560

220

190

250

Ethiopia

82 950

29

23

35

330

140

520

220

200

230

1 224 614

320

210

470

3 100

2 000

4 600

2 300

2 000

2 500

110

239 871

64

42

91

690

300

1 200

450

370

540

18

110

49

180

120

120

130

50

45

55

17

110

54

200

130

87

170

77

53

110

31

250

180

310

180

160

210

37

21

57

51

25

87

India

Indonesia

9.9

160
29

Mozambique

23 391

11

Myanmar

47 963

20

Nigeria

158 423

33

11

68

320

110

690

210

99

360

Pakistan

173 593

58

39

84

630

270

1 100

400

330

480

1.2

0.7

1.9

Philippines

93 261

31

21

43

470

410

530

260

210

310

1.0

0.5

1.8

Russian
Federation

142 958

26

16

42

190

70

330

150

130

180

8.1

6.8

9.4

South Africa

50 133

25

16

38

400

180

630

490

400

590

300

240

Thailand

69 122

11

16

130

55

210

94

78

110

15

13

18

Uganda

33 425

64

32

100

70

56

85

38

30

46

30

28

32

44 841

Viet Nam

87 848

Zimbabwe

12 571

High-burden
countries

5.8
29
3.4

7.0
12

7.0
3.3
4.7
19
2.1

9.4

75

40 513

5.1

4.9

24

Kenya

UR Tanzania

6.9

13

7.3
6.9
43
5.1

350

82

39

130

79

75

85

290

130

510

180

130

220

51

23

80

80

61

100

60

47

76

8 500 12 000

7 200

6 800

7 500

860

780

950

7.6

4.6

11

4 321 967

860

730

1 000

10 000

AFR

836 970

250

220

280

2 800

2 300

3 300

2 300

2 100

2 500

900

820

980

AMR

933 447

20

17

23

330

260

410

270

250

280

35

31

38

EMR

596 747

95

74

120

1 000

670

1 500

650

580

730

12

EUR

896 480

61

48

75

560

430

720

420

390

450

20

19

22

SEAR

1 807 594

500

370

640

5 000

3 700

6 500

3 500

3 200

3 700

190

140

230

WPR

1 798 335

130

120

150

2 500

2 200

2 800

1 700

1 500

1 800

35

26

Global

6 869 573

1 100

920

1 200

12 000 11 000 14 000

8 800

8 500

9 200 1 100

9.8

1 000

15

45
1 200

indicates no estimate available.


a
Numbers for mortality, prevalence and incidence shown to two signicant gures.
b
Mortality excludes deaths among HIV-positive TB cases. Deaths among HIV-positive TB cases are classied as HIV deaths according to ICD-10.
c
Best, low and high indicate the point estimate and lower and upper bounds of the 95% uncertainty interval.
d
Estimates for India have not yet been ofcially approved by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India and should therefore be considered provisional.

the HIV epidemic (Figure 2.5). Since 2002, the incidence


rate has fallen at around 1.3% per year and if this trend is
sustained, MDG Target 6.c will be achieved. It should be
highlighted that in previous reports in this series, incidence rates were estimated to have peaked in 2004; this
has been revised following the major review of estimates
of TB cases and deaths in African countries in December
2010 (Box 2.2). The absolute number of incident cases
has also started to fall very slowly since 2006, when the
decline in the incidence rate (per 100 000 population)
started to exceed the rate of growth in the worlds population.
Incidence rates are declining in all of WHOs six
regions (Figure 2.6). The rate of decline varies from less

12

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

than 1% per year in the Eastern Mediterranean Region


to 1.8% per year in the African Region and 3.7% per year
in the Region of the Americas. Incidence rates peaked
around the mid-1990s in the Eastern Mediterranean
Region, around 2000 in the European and South-East
Asia regions and around 2004 in the African Region.
The incidence rate has been declining since 1990 in the
Region of the Americas and the Western Pacic Region.
The latest assessment for the 22 HBCs suggests that
incidence rates are falling in 10 countries, approximately stable in 11 countries and increasing slowly in South
Africa (Figure 2.7). Estimates of TB incidence have wide
uncertainty intervals in Mozambique, Nigeria and Uganda; the prevalence surveys planned in these countries

TABLE 2.2

Estimated epidemiological burden of TB, 2010. Rates per 100 000 population except where indicated
MORTALITYa
POPULATION
(THOUSANDS)

BESTb

PREVALENCE

LOW

HIGH

Afghanistan

31 412

38

27

50

352

161

578

189

155

226

Bangladesh

148 692

43

32

57

411

188

671

225

184

269

0.2

0.1

0.3

Brazil

194 946

47

17

80

43

36

51

660

296

1 070

437

373

506

6.6

6.3

6.8

108

93

123

78

68

88

1.7

1.0

2.8

Cambodia
China

14 138
1 341 335

2.6
61
4.1

1.6
44
3.9

4.3
82
4.2

BEST

LOW

HIV PREVALENCE IN
INCIDENT TB CASES (%)

INCIDENCE
HIGH

BEST

LOW

HIGH

BEST

23

LOW

23

HIGH

23

DR Congo

65 966

54

41

69

535

250

850

327

281

376

8.2

6.0

Ethiopia

82 950

35

28

42

394

173

623

261

240

282

1 224 614

26

17

39

256

161

373

185

167

205

5.0

3.3

7.1

Indiac
Indonesia

239 871

27

18

38

289

123

484

189

155

226

Kenya

40 513

17

12

23

283

122

448

298

286

311

Mozambique

23 391

49

30

74

491

233

844

544

374

Myanmar

47 963

41

24

65

525

381

643

384

328

Nigeria

158 423

21

43

199

70

438

133

63

228

Pakistan

7.2

4.0

2.3

11

6.4

41

37

45

746

61

60

61

445

20

10

30

25

24

25

173 593

34

22

49

364

154

611

231

189

277

0.3

0.2

0.5

Philippines

93 261

33

22

46

502

438

566

275

226

329

0.4

0.2

0.7

Russian
Federation

142 958

18

11

29

136

49

233

106

90

124

5.3

5.2

5.4

50 133

50

31

75

795

364

1 260

981

806

1 170

South Africa

60

60

61

Thailand

69 122

16

10

23

182

80

300

137

112

163

16

16

17

Uganda

33 425

15

10

22

193

95

306

209

168

254

54

53

55

38

38

39

UR Tanzania

44 841

13

11

15

183

87

281

177

166

189

Viet Nam

87 848

34

21

49

334

147

576

199

152

253

Zimbabwe

12 571

27

17

40

402

185

639

633

486

799

75

75

76

4 321 967

20

17

23

231

196

268

166

158

174

12

11

14

AFR

836 970

30

26

34

332

277

392

276

256

296

39

35

44

AMR

933 447

36

28

44

29

27

30

13

12

15

EMR

596 747

173

112

246

109

97

122

High-burden
countries

EUR
SEAR

896 480
1 807 594

WPR

1 798 335

Global

6 869 573

2.2
16
6.8
27
7.5
15

1.9
12
5.4
21
6.6
13

2.5
20
8.3
35
8.5
18

4.3

2.2

2.9

1.7

6.2

2.8

63

47

80

47

44

50

5.0

4.4

5.5

278

206

360

193

179

207

5.4

4.1

6.9

139

124

156

93

85

102

178

156

201

128

123

133

2.1
13

1.5
12

2.7
14

indicates no estimate available.


a
Mortality excludes deaths among HIV-positive TB cases. Deaths among HIV-positive TB cases are classied as HIV deaths according to ICD-10.
b
Best, low and high indicate the point estimate and lower and upper bounds of the 95% uncertainty interval.
c
Estimates for India have not yet been ofcially approved by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India and should therefore be considered provisional.

should help to improve estimates of disease burden (see


section 2.5).
Estimates of the number of cases broken down by age
and sex have been prepared by an expert group as part of
an update to the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study.1
These indicate that women 2 account for an estimated
3.2 million incident cases (range, 3.0 million3.5 million), equivalent to 36% of all cases. Estimates of the
numbers of TB cases among women and children need to
be improved through more reporting and more analysis
of notication data disaggregated by age and sex.

2.2

Estimates of the prevalence of TB

The prevalence of TB can be directly measured in nationwide population-based surveys; WHO has recently published comprehensive theoretical and practical guidance
on how to design, implement, analyse and report such
surveys.3 When repeat surveys are conducted, trends in
TB prevalence can be directly measured as well. If sur1

2
3

The expert group is convened by the WHO Global Task Force


on TB Impact Measurement. The GBD study is an update to
Lopez AD et al. Global burden of disease and risk factors. New
York, Oxford University Press and The World Bank, 2006.
De ned as females aged *15 years old.
TB prevalence surveys: a handbook. Geneva, World Health
Organization, 2011 (WHO/HTM/TB/2010.17).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

13

FIGURE 2.3

Estimated TB incidence rates, 2010

RUSSIAN FEDERATION

CHINA

INDIA

PAKISTAN
AFGHANISTAN
NIGERIA
BRAZIL

DR CONGO

ETHIOPIA
UGANDA
KENYA

MYANMAR
THAILAND
INDONESIA

UR TANZANIA

ZIMBABWE
SOUTH AFRICA

Estimated new TB
cases (all forms) per
100 000 population
024

MOZAMBIQUE

2549
5099
100299
300
No estimate

FIGURE 2.4

Estimated HIV prevalence in new TB cases, 2010

HIV prevalence
in new TB cases,
all ages (%)
04
519
2049
50
No estimate

14

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

BANGLADESH
VIET NAM
CAMBODIA
PHILIPPINES

FIGURE 2.5

Global trends in estimated rates of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality. Left: Global trends in estimated incidence rate
including HIV-positive TB (green) and estimated incidence rate of HIV-positive TB (red). Centre and right: Trends in estimated TB
prevalence and mortality rates 19902010 and forecast TB prevalence and mortality rates 20112015. The horizontal dashed lines
represent the Stop TB Partnership targets of a 50% reduction in prevalence and mortality rates by 2015 compared with 1990. Shaded
areas represent uncertainty bands. Mortality excludes TB deaths among HIV-positive people.
Incidence

Prevalence

Mortality

Rate per 100 000 population

150

100

50

250

25

200

20

150

15

100

10

50

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

2015

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

FIGURE 2.6

Estimated TB incidence rates by WHO region, 19902010. Regional trends in estimated TB incidence rates (green) and estimated
incidence rates of HIV-positive TB (red). Shaded areas represent uncertainty bands.
Africa

The Americas

Eastern Mediterranean

350
140

60

300

120
50

250

100
40

Rate per 100 000 population

200

80

150

30

100

20

50

10

20

60

Europe

40

South-East Asia

Western Pacific

60
200

50
40

150

150
100

30
100
20
50
50

10

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

15

FIGURE 2.7

Estimated TB incidence rates, 22 high-burden countries, 19902010. Trends in estimated TB incidence rates (green) and
estimated incidence rates of HIV-positive TB (red). Shaded areas represent uncertainty bands.
Afghanistan

Bangladesh

Brazil

Cambodia

China

120
300

250

100
250

200
150

60

150
100

100

40

50

50

20

DR Congo

200

50

Indonesia
350
300

200
200

200
150
100

100
100

200
150

100

100

50

50

50

Nigeria

Myanmar

250

150

150

Mozambique

Kenya

250

250

Rate per 100 000 population

100

250

300

400

India

300

200

150

Ethiopia

400

600

80

200

50
0

Pakistan

Philippines

500

1000

300

500
400

800

500

250

400

400

600

300

400

200

200

100

100

50

100

200
300

300

Russian Federation

150
200

Thailand

South Africa

200

100

Uganda

UR Tanzania

1000

150

250

1000
800

150

200

800

100

600

50
200

Viet Nam

150

400

100

200

50

100

400

50

600

0
1990

Zimbabwe

1995

2000

2005

2010

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

250
800

200

600

150
100

400

50

200

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

Estimates for India have not yet been ofcially approved by the Ministry of Health &
Family Welfare, Government of India and should therefore be considered provisional.

vey data are not available, prevalence can be indirectly


estimated as the product of incidence and the average
duration of disease, but with considerable uncertainty
(Annex 1). Although the data available from prevalence
surveys allow for a robust assessment of trends in the
Western Pacic Region (especially in China and the
Philippines) and are becoming more widely available
for countries with a high burden of TB (see section 2.5),
TB prevalence can be estimated only indirectly in most
countries.
There were an estimated 12.0 million prevalent cases
(range, 11.0 million14.0 million) of TB in 2010 (Table

16

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

2.1). This is equivalent to 178 cases per 100 000 population (Table 2.2). Globally, prevalence rates have been falling since 1990, with a faster decline after 1997. However,
current forecasts suggest that the Stop TB Partnerships
target of halving TB prevalence by 2015 compared with a
baseline of 1990 will not be met (Figure 2.5). Regionally,
prevalence rates are declining in all of WHOs six regions
(Figure 2.8). The Region of the Americas has halved the
1990 level of TB prevalence already, well in advance of
the target year of 2015, and the Western Pacic Region
is close to doing so. Reductions in TB prevalence in the
Eastern Mediterranean, European and South-East Asia

FIGURE 2.8

Trends in estimated TB prevalence rates 19902010 and forecast TB prevalence rates 20112015, by WHO region
Shaded areas represent uncertainty bands. The horizontal dashed lines represent the Stop TB Partnership target of a 50% reduction in
the prevalence rate by 2015 compared with 1990. The other dashed lines show projections up to 2015.
Africa

The Americas

Eastern Mediterranean
400

120
400

100
300
80

300

200

60
200
40

100

Rate per 100 000 population

100

20
0

Europe

South-East Asia

120
100

Western Pacific

500

250

400

200

300

150

200

100

100

50

80
60
40
20
0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

1990

1995

regions have been considerable since 1990, and appear to


have accelerated since 2000. Nonetheless, current forecasts suggest that the 2015 target will not be reached.
In the African Region, estimates of TB prevalence rates
are far from the target level, and halving the 1990 rate by
2015 appears unlikely.

2.3

Estimates of deaths caused by TB

Mortality caused by TB can be directly measured if a


national VR system of high coverage with accurate coding of causes of death according to the latest revision of
the international classication of diseases (ICD-10) is in
place. Sample VR systems can provide an interim solution, and mortality surveys can sometimes be used to
obtain direct measurements of TB deaths in countries
with no VR system. In the absence of VR systems or mortality surveys, TB mortality can be estimated as the product of TB incidence and the case fatality rate.
Until 2008, WHO estimates of TB mortality used
VR data for only three countries. This was dramatically
improved to 89 countries in 2009, although most of these
countries were in the European Region and the Region of
the Americas, which account for only 8% of the worlds
TB cases. The use of sample VR data from China and sur-

2000

2005

2010

2015

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

vey data from India for the rst time in 2011 has enabled
a further major improvement to estimates of TB mortality
in this report (Box 2.3). The total of 91 countries for which
estimates of TB deaths are now based on direct measurements represent 46% of the deaths caused by TB in 2010.
In 2010, an estimated 1.1 million deaths (range,
0.9 million1.2 million) occurred among HIV-negative
cases of TB (Table 2.1), including 0.32 million deaths
(range, 0.20 million0.44 million) among women. This
was equivalent to 15 deaths per 100 000 population. In
addition, there were an estimated 0.35 million deaths
(range, 0.32 million0.39 million) among incident TB
cases that were HIV-positive (data not shown); these
deaths are classied as HIV deaths in ICD-10.1 Thus in
total, approximately 1.4 million people (range, 1.2 million1.5 million) died of TB in 2010. This estimate is
considerably lower than the estimates of 1.3 million
TB deaths among HIV-negative people and 0.4 million
deaths from TB among HIV-positive people that were
published in 2010,2 following a major revision of esti1

International statistical classication of diseases and related health


problems, 10th revision (ICD-10), 2nd ed. Geneva, World Health
Organization, 2007.
Global tuberculosis control 2010. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/TB/2010.7).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

17

BOX 2.3
Estimates of TB mortality are increasingly based on direct measurements
Estimates of TB mortality published in this report are much improved compared with those of previous years, following a major
increase in the availability and use of direct measurements from national or sample vital registration (VR) systems as well as
mortality surveys. In the 2010 global report, 602 country-year data points from 89 countries (including 3 high-burden countries
Brazil, the Russian Federation and the Philippines) were used. In this 2011 report, direct measurements from China and India
have been used for the rst time. In China, the data come from a sample VR system covering all 31 provinces. In India, data from
6 mortality surveys were pooled to obtain a national estimate for 2005, and to derive a complete time-series for 19902010. As
a result, direct measurements of mortality from 91 countries with 720 country-year VR data points and 2 mortality survey data
points were used; the proportion of global mortality due to TB that is measured directly has increased from 8% to 46%. Estimates
for 2010 and trends since 1990 are now more robust, with narrower uncertainty intervals.
Deaths caused by TB in India were estimated at 408 000 in 2005 (range, 290 000546 000), higher than the previous indirect
estimate of 291 000 (range, 177 000437 000). In China, TB deaths were previously estimated at 155 000 (99 000226 000) in
2009; the updated estimate is 55 000 (53 00057 000).
Measurements of TB mortality among HIV-positive people from VR data remain scarce and are often unreliable. HIV deaths may
be miscoded as TB deaths, and TB deaths among HIV-positive people may be impossible to quantify because TB is only recorded
as a contributory cause of death. About one third of countries submitting aggregated VR data on causes of death to WHO do not
report data on contributory causes. Estimates of TB mortality in HIV-infected individuals thus remain highly uncertain.
Further efforts to implement national or sample VR systems are essential to strengthen TB surveillance and improve assessment
of progress towards the 2015 global target for reductions in TB mortality.

BOX 2.4
Parental deaths caused by TB have created
large numbers of orphans
Globally in 2009, there were an estimated 14 million
(range, 1315 million) children aged <15 years who were
orphans as a consequence of a parental death caused
by HIV/AIDS.1 Of these children, an estimated 3.1 million
(range, 2.73.5 million) had been orphaned as a result of a
parental death from HIV-associated TB. There were also an
estimated 6.5 million (range, 5.57.7 million) children who
were orphans as a result of a parental death caused by TB
among people who were HIV-negative.
In total in 2009, there were an estimated 9.7 million (range,
8.511 million) children who were orphans as a result of
losing at least one of their parents to TB (including HIVassociated TB).
1

UNAIDS. www.unaids.org/en/dataanalysis/epidemiology
www.unaids.org/en/dataanalysis/epidemiology,
accessed 27 June 2011.

mates of the numbers of TB cases and deaths in African


countries (Box 2.2).
The number of TB deaths per 100 000 population
among HIV-negative people plus the estimated number
of TB deaths among HIV-positive people equates to a
best estimate of 20 deaths per 100 000 population.
Globally, mortality rates (excluding deaths among
HIV-positive people)1 have fallen by more than one-third
since 1990, and the current forecast suggests that the
Stop TB Partnerships target of a 50% reduction by 2015
compared with a baseline of 1990 will be achieved (Figure
2.5). Mortality rates are also declining in all of WHOs
six regions (Figure 2.9). The Region of the Americas and
the Western Pacic Region halved the 1990 level of mortality by 2000 and 2003 respectively, well in advance of
the target year of 2015. The Eastern Mediterranean and
European regions appear to have halved the 1990 level of
mortality by 2010, and the South-East Asia Region is on
track to reach the target by 2015. It is only in the African
Region that the target of halving mortality rates by 2015
looks out of reach.
Among the 22 HBCs, mortality rates appear to be falling with the possible exception of Afghanistan (Figure
2.10). Even allowing for uncertainty in the estimates,
ve countries have reached the target of halving the 1990
mortality rate by 2010 (Brazil, Cambodia, China, Uganda
and the United Republic of Tanzania), and several other
countries have a good chance of achieving the target by
2015.
1

18

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Trends in TB mortality rates are restricted to TB deaths


among HIV-negative people, given that TB deaths among
HIV-positive people are classied as HIV deaths in ICD-10.

BOX 2.5
China has dramatically reduced the burden of disease caused by TB
The past 20 years have seen major efforts to reduce the burden of TB in China and to measure trends to demonstrate impact. In the
1990s, a World Bank loan was used to fund the introduction and expansion of DOTS in 13 provinces of the country; this was followed by
nationwide coverage. After the SARS [severe acute respiratory syndrome] epidemic in 2003, surveillance of TB cases was strengthened
as part of wider improvements to surveillance of all infectious diseases, and reporting of cases and treatment outcomes from all
providers notably TB dispensaries improved dramatically. National prevalence surveys were undertaken in 1990, 2000 and 2010.
Following discussions with WHO during an epidemiology workshop for countries in the Western Pacic Region in June 2010, data on TB
deaths recorded in a sample vital registration (VR) system covering all 31 provinces were analysed for the rst time.
In June 2011, a workshop to review and update estimates of TB cases and deaths based on the new data was hosted by the Chinese
Centers for Disease Control in Beijing. A team from WHO participated in this workshop. The main conclusions were that prevalence was
halved between 1990 and 2010, mortality rates fell by almost 80% between 1990 and 2010 and
that incidence rates have fallen by 3.4% per year since 1990. Further details are provided below.
Incidence and notifications (black)
National surveys found a prevalence rate of bacteriologically-conrmed pulmonary TB of 177
(165189) per 100 000 population (all ages) in 1990, 160 (142177) per 100 000 population (all
ages) in 2000 and 119 (113135) per 100 000 population aged 15 years in 2010. Adjusting for
age and accounting for extrapulmonary TB, the estimated overall prevalence rate per 100 000
population fell from 215 (200230) per 100 000 population in 1990 to 108 (93123) per 100 000
population in 2010.1 The rate of decline was 2.2% per year between 1990 and 2000, and 4.7%
per year between 2000 and 2010. These estimated reductions in TB prevalence are likely to
be conservative, because screening methods were improved over time (for example, full chest
X-rays were taken in 2010 compared with the use of less sensitive uoroscopy in 2000) and
thus cases were more likely to be detected in successive surveys.

Rate per 100 000 population

TB prevalence
150

100

50

1990

TB mortality

2010

2000

2005

2010

200
180
160
140
120
100

1990

1995

Mortality
20
Rate per 100 000 population

MDR-TB

2005

220

TB incidence
If TB surveillance performs to very high standards, TB incidence is best measured from routine
notication data. Since 2005, a web-based and mandatory TB reporting system has been fully
operational and directly covers almost all health facilities in the country. In some remote areas
where facilities are not linked directly to the system, reports are provided to the nearest facility
that is linked to the system. In 2009, the TB surveillance system was assessed to capture close
to 100% of all detected TB cases. When combined with measured trends in prevalence and
mortality, incidence rates were estimated to have declined by 3.4% per year since 1990.

2000

Prevalence

Rate per 100 000 population

Data on TB mortality are available from two sources. The rst is a series of two national mortality
surveys conducted in 1989 and 1999. The second is a sample VR system in which mortality data
are recorded for 161 counties with a population of about 76 million representing all 31 provinces
of China. Standardized coding of causes of deaths has been in place since 2004, using a national
coding scheme derived from ICD-10. The data from the surveys and the sample VR system are
remarkably consistent. The ratio of TB deaths (excluding HIV) to TB notications fell from 24%
in 2000 to 6% in 2010, as a result of (i) a likely decline in case fatality rates associated with
improvements in the quality of TB care and (ii) improved reporting of TB cases at the time of
diagnosis, particularly after 2005 (see below). Overall, TB mortality has declined rapidly, at an
average rate of 8.6% per year between 1990 and 2010.

1995

15

10
Two sources of drug resistance surveillance (DRS) data are available: (i) data from surveys
designed to measure the magnitude of drug resistance that were conducted among samples
of notied TB cases in 10 provinces between 1995 and 2005 and at national level in 2007; and
5
(ii) data from the TB prevalence surveys conducted in 2000 and 2010 in which all diagnosed
culture-positive cases were tested for drug susceptibility. In the 2000 prevalence survey, 7.6%
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
of culture-positive TB cases were found to have MDR strains (standard deviation (SD), 1.6%),
compared with 5.4% (SD, 1.6%) in the 2010 prevalence survey. The difference is not statistically
signicant. However, the estimated number of prevalent MDR-TB cases in the general population, obtained from taking the product of
TB prevalence and the observed proportion of prevalent cases with MDR-TB, fell from 164 000 (99 000250 000) in 2000 to 78 000
(41 000126 000) in 2010.

Trends in the proportion of notied cases that have MDR-TB in China cannot be established with condence due to the highly heterogeneous trends across provinces in which surveys of drug resistance have been carried out. A second national drug resistance survey
will provide a robust assessment of trends in the proportion of MDR-TB among notied cases.
1

This is despite rapid aging of the population which, other things being equal, increases the burden of TB because TB is more common among adults.
The proportion of children in the population fell from 28% in 1990 to 26% in 2000 and 20% in 2010.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

19

FIGURE 2.9

Trends in estimated TB mortality rates 19902010 and forecast TB mortality rates 20112015, by WHO region
Estimated TB mortality excludes TB deaths among HIV-positive people. Shaded areas represent uncertainty bands.a The horizontal
dashed lines represent the Stop TB Partnership target of a 50% reduction in the mortality rate by 2015 compared with 1990. The other
dashed lines show projections up to 2015.
Africa

The Americas

Eastern Mediterranean
40

40

30

20

10

30

Rate per 100 000 population

20

Europe

10

South-East Asia

Western Pacific

50

20

15
40

15
10

30
10
20

5
5

10
0

0
1990
a

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

0
1990

1995

2005

2010

2015

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2015

The width of uncertainty bands narrows as the proportion of regional mortality estimated using vital registration data increases.

2.4 Estimates of the number of cases


of MDR-TB
In previous reports in this series as well as WHO reports
on drug-resistant TB specically, estimates of the number of incident cases of MDR-TB have been presented.1
For the rst time in this report, estimates of the number
of prevalent cases of MDR-TB are presented instead. The
reasons are that MDR-TB is a chronic disease and without appropriate diagnosis and treatment for most of these
cases (see Chapter 3), there are many more prevalent
cases than incident cases; calculations of the number
of prevalent cases of MDR-TB are more readily understood compared with the complex calculations needed to
estimate the incidence of MDR-TB; and the number of
prevalent cases of MDR-TB directly inuences the active
transmission of strains of MDR-TB.
The estimated number of prevalent cases of MDRTB can be estimated at global level as the product of the
estimated number of prevalent cases of TB and the best
estimate of the proportion of notied TB patients2 with
MDR-TB at global level. In 2010, there were an estimated
650 000 cases of MDR-TB among the worlds 12.0 million prevalent cases of TB. Estimates at country level are

20

2000

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

not presented for reasons explained in Annex 1. However,


estimates of the proportion of new and retreatment cases
that have MDR-TB are summarized in Table 2.3.
A recurring and important question is whether the
number of MDR-TB cases is increasing, decreasing
or stable. A reliable assessment of trends in MDR-TB
requires data from Class A continuous surveillance3 or
data from periodic surveys of drug resistance that are
designed, implemented and analysed according to WHO
guidelines.4 There has been substantial progress in the
coverage of continuous surveillance and surveys of drug
resistance (Figure 2.11). Unfortunately, progress is not yet
sufcient to provide a de nitive assessment of trends in
MDR-TB globally or regionally (Box 2.6).
1

In the 2010 WHO report on global TB control, it was estimated that there were 440 000 incident cases of MDR-TB in
2008.
This includes new and retreatment cases (see Chapter 3 for
de nitions).
Class A continuous surveillance refers to data from ongoing
surveillance of drug resistance that are representative of the
caseload of patients.
Guidelines for the surveillance of drug resistance in tuberculosis 4th
ed. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/
TB/2009.422).

FIGURE 2.10

Trends in estimated TB mortality rates 19902010 and forecast TB mortality rates 20112015, 22 high-burden countries
Estimated TB mortality excludes TB deaths among HIV-positive people. Shaded areas represent uncertainty bands. The horizontal
dashed lines represent the Stop TB Partnership target of a 50% reduction in the mortality rate by 2015 compared with 1990. The other
dashed lines show projections up to 2015.
Brazil

Bangladesh

Afghanistan
80

80

60

60

40

40

20

20

20

150

15

100

10

50

15
10

Ethiopia

DR Congo

Rate per 100 000 population

80

India

50

50

40

40

60

30

30

40

20

20

20

10

10

Myanmar

Mozambique
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0

200
150
100
50
0

60

25
20

40

15
10

20

5
0

Pakistan

Nigeria

60

80

50

60

40

40

30
20

20

UR Tanzania

Uganda

Thailand

Zimbabwe

10

35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0

20

Philippines
70

100

50

40

Viet Nam

30

100

60

Kenya

Indonesia

150

80

60

200

South Africa

Russian Federation
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0

China

Cambodia
200

100

40

80

30

60

20

40
10

20

0
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015

1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015

1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015

50

50

40

40
30

30

20

20

10

10
0

0
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015

2.5

1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015

Estimates for India have not yet been ofcially approved by the Ministry of Health &
Family Welfare, Government of India and should therefore be considered provisional.

Strengthening measurement of
the burden of disease caused by TB:
the WHO Global Task Force on TB
Impact Measurement

The estimates of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality


and their trend presented in sections 2.12.4 are based on
the best available data and analytical methods. In 2009,
methods were fully reviewed and updated, and between
April 2009 and July 2011 consultations were held with
96 countries accounting for 89% of the worlds TB cases. Nonetheless, there is considerable scope for further
improvement. In this nal section of the chapter the latest status of efforts to improve measurement of the burden of disease caused by TB, under the umbrella of the
WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement,
are described.
Established in mid-2006, the mandate of the WHO

Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement is to


ensure the best possible assessment of progress towards
achieving the 2015 global targets for reductions in the
burden of disease caused by TB, to report on progress
in the interim and to strengthen capacity for monitoring and evaluation at the country level. The Task Force
includes representatives from leading technical and
nancial partners and countries with a high burden of
TB.1
1

Partners that are actively participating in the work of the Task


Force include the Centers for Diseases Control (United States
of America), the European Centre for Disease Prevention and
Control, the Global Fund, the Health Protection Agency in the
UK, the KNCV Tuberculosis Foundation, the London School
of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK, the Research
Institute for Tuberculosis in Japan, the Union and USAID.
Many countries with a high burden of TB are engaged in the
work of the Task Force.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

21

TABLE 2.3

Estimated proportion of TB cases that have MDR-TB, 27 high MDR-TB burden countries and WHO regions
ESTIMATED % OF NEW
TB CASES WITH MDR-TBa

Armenia
Azerbaijan

9.4
2.1

3849

1927

56

5062

1.72.5

28

2532
5863

2428

60

2.0

1.13.2

24

1832

China

5.7

4.67.1

26

2230

2.2

0.15.3

Estonia

26

18

1324

9.4

1.917

44

3258

Ethiopia

1.6

0.92.8

12

5.621

Georgia

9.5

8.211

31

2735

India

2.1

1.52.7

15

1317

Indonesia

1.8

1.12.7

17

8.1--26

1118

45

4447

Kazakhstan

14

Kyrgyzstan

14

1217

39

3543

Latvia

10

8.013

24

1633

Lithuania

11

8.813

52

4757

3.15.6

10

6.914

Myanmar

4.2

Nigeria

2.2

0.15.3

Pakistan

3.4

0.86.0

21

7.334

Philippines

4.0

2.95.5

21

1429

9.4

6268

Republic of Moldova

19

1722

65

Russian Federation

18

1619

46

South Africa

1.8

1.42.3

6.7

1.917

4152
5.48.2

Tajikistan

17

1124

62

5370

Ukraine

16

1419

44

4049

Uzbekistan

14

4256

1119

49

Viet Nam

2.7

2.03.7

19

1425

High MDR-TB burden countries

3.8

2.05.7

21

1428

AFR

1.9

0.63.3

AMR

2.1

0.73.4

12

3.819

3.4

0.95.9

21

7.534

8.616

37

3341

EMR
EUR

12

9.4

3.016

SEAR

2.1

1.72.5

17

1718

WPR

4.9

3.66.1

23

2027

Global

3.4

1.95.0

20

1425

Best estimates are for the latest available year. Estimates in italics are based on regional data.

At its second meeting in December 2007, the Task


Force defi ned three strategic areas of work:1
 strengthening surveillance towards the ultimate goal
of direct measurement of incidence and mortality
from notification and VR systems;
 conducting surveys of the prevalence of TB disease in
a set of global focus countries that met epidemiological and other relevant criteria; and
 periodic review and updating of the methods used to
translate surveillance and survey data into estimates
of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality.
The third area of work is discussed in more detail in
Annex 1. The following sections focus on the fi rst two

22

CONFIDENCE INTERVAL

43

Bulgaria
DR Congo

ESTIMATED % OF RETREATMENT
TB CASES WITH MDR-TBa

7.012

22

Bangladesh
Belarus

CONFIDENCE INTERVAL

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

strategic areas of work. Full details of the Task Forces


work are available on its web site.2

2.5.1 Strengthening surveillance


In 2008, the Task Force defi ned a conceptual framework
for assessment of surveillance data, as a basis for updating
estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB and for
defi ning recommendations for how surveillance needs to
1

TB impact measurement: policy and recommendations for how to


assess the epidemiological burden of TB and the impact of TB control.
Geneva, World Health Organization, 2009 (Stop TB policy
paper no. 2; WHO/HTM/TB/2009.416).
www.who.int/tb/advisory_bodies/impact_measurement_
taskforce

FIGURE 2.11

Progress in global coverage of data on drug resistance, 19942010

Year of most recent


representative data
on anti-TB drug
surveillance
19951999
20002004
20052009
2010
Ongoing in 2011
No data available
Subnational data only

be improved to reach the ultimate goal of direct measurement of TB cases and deaths from notication and VR
data (Figure 2.2). Tools to implement it in practice were
also developed, and used in the 96 country consultations
illustrated in Figure 2.1.
Building on progress and lessons learnt in the past
two years, the Task Forces four priorities in 2011 and
2012 are:
 dening standards and related benchmarks that must
be met for notication and VR data to be considered a
direct measurement of TB cases and deaths;
 development of guidance on inventory studies;
 development of guidance on patient or case-based
electronic recording and reporting (ERR);
 institutionalizing assessments of trends in disease
burden and related efforts to strengthen surveillance
within the grant cycle of the Global Fund.
The mid-2011 version of the Task Forces framework for
assessing surveillance data implicitly denes some of
the standards required for notication and VR data to
be considered a direct measurement of cases and deaths,
respectively. For instance, notication data should be
complete and without duplications or misclassications.
However, for some of the elements that are assessed,
standards and benchmarks have not been explicitly
dened. For example:

 the framework states that data should be internally


and externally consistent, but it does not de ne what
this means in practice;
 the framework states that no diagnosed cases should
be missed by notication systems, but it does not
specify how this should be demonstrated or at what
level under-reporting would be considered acceptable (understanding that even the best surveillance
systems do not capture all diagnosed cases);
 the framework states that TB deaths should be recorded in VR systems, but it does not specify the standards
of coverage and accuracy in coding that must be met
for VR data to be considered a direct measure of TB
mortality.
In 2011, the Task Force convened an expert group to
develop draft standards and benchmarks, and to eldtest these in a variety of countries (including those with
both strong and weaker surveillance systems). The aim is
to reach agreement on a set of standards and benchmarks
(and associated surveillance checklist) that can be used
as a basis for efforts to strengthen surveillance in many
countries (including all those with Global Fund grants
see below) as well as to determine the countries for which
national surveillance data can already be used as a direct
proxy for TB cases and deaths. By July 2011, eld-testing
was planned or underway in Brazil, China, Egypt, Kenya,
Thailand, the UK and the United States of America.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

23

BOX 2.6
Global and regional trends in MDR-TB
The Global Project on anti-tuberculosis drug resistance surveillance was launched in 1994 with two key objectives: (i) to estimate
the magnitude of drug resistance; and (ii) to monitor trends in drug resistance. Since 1994, signicant efforts to promote the
monitoring of drug resistance through national surveys and continuous surveillance based on diagnostic testing have been made,
with coordination at the global level by WHO. A total of six global reports on drug resistance and four editions of guidelines on
the conduct of drug resistance surveys have been published. The coverage of data has improved considerably (Figure
Figure 2.11),
2.11 and
about 60% of countries now have at least one direct and representative measurement of the level of drug resistance among their
TB patients. For some of these countries, data reported for successive years have allowed the analysis of trends.
The latest available data were used to conduct an analysis of trends in MDR-TB among new (previously untreated) TB patients
for WHO regions and the world as a whole.1 Data from 74 countries and territories with measurements for at least two years
were used. There were on average 7 measurements for each of these 74 countries (range, 217 per country or territory). Missing
country data were imputed from a pooled estimate for countries with similar epidemiological characteristics (these groups of
countries are different from the WHO regions shown in the table), assuming that levels of MDR-TB as well as efforts to control
MDR-TB were comparable among these countries. The annual
change in the percentage of new TB patients with MDR-TB was
WHO REGION
ANNUAL
ANNUAL CHANGE
ANNUAL CHANGE
CHANGE
LOW ESTIMATE
HIGH ESTIMATE
calculated for each country or territory and then combined
(with weighting according to the total number of new TB cases
African
5.6%
7.5%
18.7%
in the country) to produce regional and global estimates along
Americas
0.2%
17.1%
17.5%
with their uncertainty bounds. Results are presented in the
Eastern
table.
0.7%
23.5%
22.0%
Mediterranean

The best estimates suggest that levels of MDR-TB among new


Europe
3.5%
4.8%
11.9%
TB patients are relatively stable at global level and the Region
South-East Asia
1.3%
31.4%
28.8%
of the Americas, falling in the Eastern Mediterranean, SouthWestern
Paci
c
4.5%
12.7%
3.8%
East Asia and Western Pacic regions, and increasing in the
African and European Regions. However, there is considerable
GLOBAL
0.3%
14.7%
14.1%
uncertainty as illustrated by the low and high estimates of
rates of change. Despite rapid increases in the coverage of
data on drug resistance, this means that a denitive answer to the question of whether the proportion of TB cases with MDR-TB
is increasing, decreasing or stable at the global level cannot yet be provided.
Coverage of surveillance of anti-tuberculosis drug resistance must improve further and be considered an essential and fundamental
element of TB surveillance. Recent technological advances now make the diagnosis of drug-resistant TB easier, quicker and more
accessible (Chapter
Chapter 5),
5 and offer opportunities for rapid gains in global surveillance of drug-resistant TB. For this potential to
be realized, anti-tuberculosis drug resistance surveillance must be prioritized by national TB control programmes and funding
agencies.
1

Data on the prevalence of MDR-TB among previously treated TB patients were too limited to allow assessment of trends.

Inventory studies with record-linkage are used to


quantify the number of TB cases that are diagnosed but
not recorded in notication data. They allow a much
better estimation of TB incidence because they provide
concrete evidence of the gap between notied cases and
diagnosed cases (which may be especially big in countries with a large private sector), and under some circumstances allow estimation of the number of undiagnosed
cases as well. They are also an essential part of the evidence needed to demonstrate that surveillance meets the
standards required for notication data to be considered
a direct measure of TB incidence. Unfortunately, inventory studies have been implemented in very few countries
to date, and the lack of such studies is a major reason
for uncertainty in estimates of TB incidence (section 2.1).
Examples of countries where inventory studies have been
implemented include the UK, the Netherlands and several countries in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (for

24

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

example, Egypt, the Syrian Arab Republic and Yemen).


To facilitate and encourage much wider implementation,
WHO and its partners (notably the Centers for Disease
Control, United States of America, and the Health Protection Agency in the UK) are developing a guide on how
to design, implement, analyse and report on inventory
studies. As this report went to press, the guide was due
to be published by the end of 2011.
Assessment of various aspects of data quality is the
rst and most basic of the three major components of
the Task Forces framework for assessing surveillance
data (Figure 2.2). It was clear in all regional and country
workshops that many aspects of data quality could not be
assessed because of the absence of patient or case-based
ERR systems. For example, it was not possible to assess
whether notication data included duplicate entries or
misclassied cases. Electronic datasets are also needed
to facilitate analysis of data; for example, to check for

internal and external consistency. In 2011, WHO and its


partners are developing a guide on ERR (Box 2.7).
The Global Fund is the major source of international
funding for national TB control programmes (NTPs),
amounting to US$ 0.5 billion in 2012 (Chapter 4). More
than 100 low-income and middle-income countries
receive grants for TB control from the Global Fund. In
2010, the Global Fund took steps to streamline several
aspects of the grant cycle. These include transitioning
from multiple grants within the same country to one
consolidated grant, and periodically reviewing the performance of grants, including in-depth assessments of
trends in the disease burden caused by TB using surveillance and survey data. These assessments of trends
will in turn be linked to recommendations for strengthening surveillance; their implementation can be followed through the Global Funds standard monitoring
and evaluation processes. This new grant architecture
offers an excellent opportunity to institutionalize assessments of surveillance systems and related efforts to
strengthen surveillance in many countries (Box 2.8). The
secretariat of WHOs Global Task Force on TB Impact
Measurement is working closely with the Global Fund to
make this opportunity a reality.

2.5.2 Surveys of the prevalence of TB disease


Nationwide population-based surveys of the prevalence
of TB disease provide a direct measurement of the number of TB cases; repeat surveys conducted several years
apart can allow direct measurement of trends in disease
burden. Surveys are most relevant in countries where
the burden of TB is high (otherwise sample sizes and
associated costs and logistics become prohibitive) and
surveillance systems are thought (or known) to miss a
large fraction of cases. A good illustration of the value of
prevalence surveys is provided by the results from three
surveys in China (Box 2.5). Before 2007, however, few
countries had implemented prevalence surveys (Figure
2.12). From 2002 to 2008, there was typically one survey per year. In the 1990s, national surveys were con ned

BOX 2.7
New guidance on electronic recording
and reporting
Surveillance systems depend on countries keeping good
records of all TB cases notied to national TB control programmes (NTPs) and of TB treatment outcomes. This is
a data-intensive activity that is increasingly moving away
from paper-based to electronic recording and reporting
(ERR).
Advantages of ERR include:
Better management of individual patients, for example
by providing fast access to laboratory results;
Better programme and resource management, by encouraging staff to use and act upon live data. This may
help to prevent defaulting from treatment and assist
with management of drug supplies (including avoidance
of stockouts);
Improved surveillance by making it easier for facilities
not traditionally linked to the NTP, such as hospitals,
prisons and the private sector, to report TB cases, and
by reducing the burden of compiling and submitting
data through paper-based quarterly reports;
Greater analysis and use of data, since data can be
readily imported into statistical packages, results are
available to decision-makers more quickly and it is possible to detect outbreaks promptly;
Higher quality data, since automated data quality checks
can be used and duplicate or misclassied notications
can be identied and removed (which is very difcult or
impossible to do nationally with paper-based systems).
It is also easier to introduce new data items.
WHO is coordinating the development of a guide on how
to design and implement ERR according to best-practice
standards. It is due to be published in 2011.

FIGURE 2.12

Global progress in implementing national surveys of the prevalence of TB disease, actual (20022010)
and planned (20112015)
8
Nepal

Other

Number of surveys

Bangladesh

GFC, Asia

Global focus countries (GFC)


selected by WHO Global
Task Force on TB Impact
Measurement

GFC, Africa

Indonesia

2
Philippines
0

Lao PDR

Thailand

Gambia

Myanmar

Cambodia

Ghana

Kenya

Philippines

China

Nigeria

Malawi

Viet Nam

Pakistan

Rwanda

South Africa

Mozambique

Cambodia

Malaysia

Indonesia

Eritrea

Thailand

Viet Nam

Bangladesh

Myanmar

Ethiopia

UR Tanzania

Uganda

Zambia

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

201315

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

25

BOX 2.8
Periodic reviews of Global Fund grants an opportunity to improve measurement of trends in
disease burden and strengthen surveillance worldwide
In November 2009, the Board of the Global Fund approved a new grant architecture.1 This includes the introduction of a single
grant agreement per disease (HIV, TB or malaria), in contrast to the old model in which each newly-approved proposal generated
a separate grant agreement with its own budget and performance framework (such that some countries had multiple grants and
multiple performance frameworks for multiple time-periods). The new grant architecture also introduces periodic reviews. These
will be conducted at least once every three years and include an in-depth evaluation of how funds have been used, programmatic
performance and progress towards the proposal targets, including targets for reductions in disease burden.2 Results will determine
funding levels in future years.
Periodic reviews replace the previous model of reviewing each grant agreement after two years, prior to the approval of Phase 2
(years 35 of the standard ve-year grant). Existing country-led review processes (such as National Programme Reviews and Joint
External Programme Evaluations) will be encouraged as inputs to the periodic review process.
With the introduction of periodic reviews, evaluations of progress in reducing the burden of TB disease will be closely linked to
decisions about future funding commitments. The indicators that will be used to evaluate progress have been dened in consultation
with partners including WHO. For all countries, assessments for TB will include analysis of trends in the case notication rate,
after careful assessment of its suitability as a proxy for trends in TB incidence. Assessment of trends in notications will require
analysis of trends in case-nding efforts, the quality and coverage of surveillance and risk factors for TB. If data from national
or sample vital registration systems are available, trends in mortality will be assessed and used to inform the periodic review.
In countries that have conducted at least two surveys of the prevalence of TB disease, trends in TB prevalence will be assessed
and used to inform the periodic review. In addition to case notication rates, the treatment success rate for new smear-positive
TB cases will also be assessed. It is anticipated that analysis of trends in disease burden will be undertaken prior to the periodic
review; to facilitate this work, the Global Fund will allocate the necessary resources within the monitoring and evaluation budget
of grant agreements. An indicative budget of up to US$ 100 000 may be allocated.3
Periodic reviews provide an unprecedented opportunity for regular and systematic assessment of trends in the burden of disease
caused by TB in more than 100 countries, using the framework and associated tools developed by the WHO Global Task Force on
TB Impact Measurement.4 If this opportunity is taken, periodic reviews will substantially improve estimates of trends in the burden
of disease caused by TB and provide a foundation for strengthening surveillance of the disease worldwide.
1

New grant architecture. Geneva, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, 2011 (also available at:
www.theglobalfund.org/en/grantarchitecture).
www.theglobalfund.org/en/grantarchitecture
Operational policy note on periodic reviews. Geneva, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, 2011 (also available at:
www.theglobalfund.org/documents/core/manuals/Core_OperationalPolicy_Manual_en.pdf)
www.theglobalfund.org/documents/core/manuals/Core_OperationalPolicy_Manual_en.pdf
This is separate from the dedicated budgets required to undertake TB prevalence surveys (cumulative investments amount to US$ 25 million)
or other studies that will feed into the assessment.
The tool used to date is available at: www.who.int/tb/advisory_bodies/
www.who.int/tb/advisory_bodies/impact_measurement_taskforce
impact_measurement_taskforce. Additional tools including a
surveillance checklist and associated standards and benchmarks (see section 2.5.1) will be made available on the same site as they become
available.

to China, Myanmar, the Philippines and the Republic


of Korea. Before 2009 and with the exception of Eritrea
in 2005, the last national surveys in the African Region
were undertaken between 1957 and 1961.
In 2007, WHOs Global Task Force on TB Impact
Measurement identied 53 countries that met epidemiological and other criteria for implementing a survey. A
set of 22 global focus countries were selected to receive
particular support in the years leading up to 2015. Many
of the global focus countries had already developed plans
to implement surveys and had sought funding from the
Global Fund at this time, but in most countries experience and expertise in such surveys were limited.
Since early 2008, the Task Force has made substantial
efforts to support countries to design, implement, analyse
and report on surveys. These efforts include close collaboration with the Global Fund to help secure full funding
for surveys through reprogramming of grants (several

26

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

surveys were initially under-budgeted); workshops to


develop protocols; expert reviews of protocols; training
courses for survey coordinators without prior experience of survey implementation, including an opportunity to observe eld operations in Cambodia; training
courses to build a group of junior international consultants who can provide technical assistance to countries;
country missions by experts from the Task Force; and
the facilitation of AsiaAfrica collaboration in which survey coordinators from Asian countries provide guidance
and support to those leading surveys in African countries where no recent experience exists (which should
later develop into AfricaAfrica collaboration). Besides
WHO, those actively engaged in these efforts include the
staff who have led and managed surveys in Cambodia,
China, Myanmar and Viet Nam; the Centers for Disease
Control, United States of America; the Global Fund; the
KNCV Tuberculosis Foundation in the Netherlands; the

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK;


and the Research Institute for Tuberculosis, Japan. All
of this support is underpinned by a new handbook on
TB prevalence surveys (also known as the lime book),
which provides comprehensive theoretical and practical guidance on all aspects
of surveys.1 The book was
produced as a major collaborative effort involving
15 agencies and institutions
and 50 authors in 2010, and
was widely disseminated in
2011.

As a result of these collaborative efforts, there is now


major global and national momentum behind prevalence
surveys. If surveys are implemented according to schedule, between ve and eight surveys per year will be implemented during the period 20102015. These include
surveys in 20 global focus countries 9 in Asia and 11 in
Africa (Figure 2.12).
A landmark achievement in 2011 was the successful completion of the rst national prevalence survey in
Ethiopia. This is the rst such survey in Africa following
WHO guidelines in more than 50 years. Results will be
featured in the 2012 global report, alongside results from
surveys undertaken in Cambodia and Pakistan.

TB prevalence surveys: a handbook. Geneva, World Health


Organization, 2011 (WHO/HTM/TB/2010.17).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

27

CHAPTER 3

Case notications and treatment outcomes

KEY MESSAGES
 In 2010, 6.2 million people were diagnosed with TB
and notied to national TB control programmes. Of these,
5.4 million had TB for the rst time and 0.3 million had
a recurrent episode of TB after being cured of TB in the
past. Besides a small number of cases whose history of
treatment was not recorded, the remaining 0.4 million had
already been diagnosed with TB but had their treatment
changed to a retreatment regimen after treatment failed
or was interrupted.
 India and China accounted for 40% of the worlds
notied cases of TB in 2010; Africa accounted for a further
24%, of which one quarter were in South Africa. The 22
high-TB burden countries accounted for 82%.
 Public-private and public-public mix (PPM) initiatives
to engage the full range of care providers can help to
increase case notications. In 20 countries for which
data were available, PPM contributed between about one
fth to around 40% of total notications in 2010, in the
geographical areas in which PPM was implemented.
 Treatment outcomes are most closely monitored
among new cases with smear-positive pulmonary TB.
Among cases treated in 2009, 87% were successfully
treated the highest level reported to date. Treatment
success rates remained low in the European Region, at
67%, with high death and failure rates.
 There has been an increase in the number of TB
patients diagnosed with MDR-TB in the last ve years.
However, patients enrolled on treatment for MDR-TB
in 2010 only represented 16% of the MDR-TB cases
estimated to exist among reported TB cases. Outcomes
of treatment for MDR-TB are available for a small number
of patients. The numbers of TB cases tested for MDR-TB,
diagnosed with MDR-TB and successfully treated for MDRTB lag far behind the targets set in the Global Plan.
 In most parts of the world, less than 5% of TB patients
are tested for MDR-TB. Laboratory strengthening and new
diagnostics are urgently needed to improve the coverage
of diagnostic testing for MDR-TB.
 Between 1995 and 2010, 55 million TB patients
were treated for TB in programmes that had adopted
the DOTS/Stop TB Strategy; 46 million of these people
were successfully treated. These treatments saved an
estimated 6.8 million lives compared with the pre-DOTS
standard of care.

28

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

The total number of TB cases that occur each year can


be estimated for the world as a whole and for regions and
individual countries, but with uncertainty (as explained
in Chapter 2). This uncertainty reects the fact that in
most countries especially countries that have the largest number of reported cases of TB surveillance systems do not capture all TB cases. Cases may be missed
by routine notication systems because people with TB
do not seek care, seek care but remain undiagnosed, or
are diagnosed by public and private providers that do not
report cases to local or national authorities.
Routine recording and reporting of the numbers of
TB cases diagnosed and treated by national TB control
programmes (NTPs) and monitoring of the outcomes
of treatment was one of the ve elements of TB control
emphasized in the DOTS strategy, and remains one of
the core elements of the Stop TB Strategy (Chapter 1).
Following the introduction and roll-out of the DOTS/
Stop TB Strategy in most countries since the mid-1990s,
data on the number of people diagnosed and treated for
TB and associated treatment outcomes are routinely
reported by NTPs in almost all countries, and in turn
these data are reported to WHO in annual rounds of
global TB data collection. With increasing engagement
by NTPs of the full range of care providers, including
those in the private sector and those in the public sector not previously linked to NTP reporting systems, data
are also better reecting the total number of diagnosed
cases. The number of TB cases that are not diagnosed
is expected to be low in countries where health care is
of high quality and readily accessible. In other countries,
the numbers of undiagnosed cases can only be estimated
with considerable uncertainty, using relevant data sources such as population-based surveys of the prevalence of
TB disease, inventory studies including record-linkage
and capture re-capture modelling, and indicators on the
coverage and cost of health services (for further details,
see Chapter 2).
This chapter summarizes the total number of people
who were diagnosed with TB and notied by NTPs in
2010 as well as trends in notications of TB cases since
1990. It is assumed that notied cases were treated for
TB. Data from 20 countries illustrating the contribution
to total notications of efforts to engage public and private providers not traditionally linked to the NTP are also
presented. The chapter then summarizes information

BOX 3.1
Denitions of TB cases1
Denite case of TB A patient with Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex identied from a clinical specimen, either by culture or by
a newer method such as molecular line probe assay. In countries that lack laboratory capacity to routinely identify Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, a pulmonary case with one or more initial sputum specimens positive for acid-fast bacilli (AFB) is also considered to
be a denite case, provided that there is functional external quality assurance (EQA) with blind rechecking.
Case of TB A denite case of TB (dened above) or one in which a health worker (clinician or other medical practitioner) has
diagnosed TB and decided to treat the patient with a full course of TB treatment.
Case of pulmonary TB A patient with TB disease involving the lung parenchyma.
Smear-positive pulmonary case of TB A patient with one or more initial sputum smear examinations (direct smear microscopy)
AFB-positive; or one sputum examination AFB+ and radiographic abnormalities consistent with active pulmonary TB as determined
by a clinician. Smear-positive cases are the most infectious and thus of the highest priority from a public health perspective.
Smear-negative pulmonary case of TB A patient with pulmonary TB not meeting the above criteria for smear-positive disease.
Diagnostic criteria should include: at least two sputum smear examinations negative for AFB; radiographic abnormalities consistent
with active pulmonary TB; no response to a course of broad-spectrum antibiotics (except in a patient for whom there is laboratory
conrmation or strong clinical evidence of HIV infection); and a decision by a clinician to treat with a full course of anti-TB
chemotherapy. A patient with positive culture but negative AFB sputum examinations is also a smear-negative case of pulmonary TB.
Extrapulmonary case of TB A patient with TB of organs other than the lungs (e.g. pleura, lymph nodes, abdomen, genitourinary
tract, skin, joints and bones, meninges). Diagnosis should be based on one culture-positive specimen, or histological or strong clinical
evidence consistent with active extrapulmonary disease, followed by a decision by a clinician to treat with a full course of anti-TB
chemotherapy. A patient in whom both pulmonary and extrapulmonary TB has been diagnosed should be classied as a pulmonary
case.
New case of TB A patient who has never had treatment for TB or who has taken anti-TB drugs for less than one month.
Retreatment case of TB There are three types of retreatment case: (i) a patient previously treated for TB, who is started on a
retreatment regimen after previous treatment has failed (treatment after failure); (ii) a patient previously treated for TB who returns
to treatment having previously defaulted; and (iii) a patient who was previously declared cured or treatment completed and is
diagnosed with bacteriologically-positive (sputum smear or culture) TB (relapse).
Case of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) TB that is resistant to two rst-line drugs: isoniazid and rifampicin. For patients
diagnosed with MDR-TB, WHO recommends treatment of at least 20 months with a regimen that includes second-line anti-TB
drugs.
Note: New and relapse cases of TB are incident cases. Cases of TB started on a retreatment regimen following treatment failure or treatment
interruption are prevalent cases.
1

See Treatment of tuberculosis guidelines, 4th ed. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/STB/2009.420).

on the diagnosis and treatment of multidrug-resistant


TB (MDR-TB)1 specically, and compares the numbers
of cases tested for MDR-TB and the numbers of cases
diagnosed and started on treatment with the targets set
out in the Global Plan to Stop TB 20112015 (Chapter 1).
Finally, the chapter summarizes data on treatment outcomes among new sputum smear-positive cases of pulmonary TB, which have traditionally been the focus of
efforts to monitor treatment outcomes, and the available
data on treatment outcomes among TB patients diagnosed with MDR-TB who were treated with second-line
anti-TB drugs.

3.1

Number of diagnosed and notied


cases of TB

In 2010, 6.2 million people were diagnosed with TB and


notied to NTPs. Of these, 5.4 million had TB for the
rst time and 0.3 million had a recurrent episode of TB

after being previously cured of TB. Besides a small number of cases whose history of treatment was not recorded,
the remaining 0.4 million had already been diagnosed
with TB but had their treatment changed to a retreatment regimen after treatment failed or was interrupted
(for de nitions of each type of case, see Box 3.1).
Among people who were diagnosed with TB for the
rst time (new cases), there were 2.6 million cases of sputum smear-positive pulmonary TB, 2.0 million cases of
sputum smear-negative pulmonary TB (including cases
for which smear status was unknown) and 0.8 million
cases of extrapulmonary TB (Table 3.1).2 Of the new cases of pulmonary TB, 57% were sputum smear-positive.
1
2

For de nitions, see Box 3.1.


No distinction is made between DOTS and non-DOTS programmes. This is because by 2007, virtually all (more than
99%) notied cases were reported to WHO as treated in
DOTS programmes.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

29

TABLE 3.1

Case notications, 2010


NEW

TOTAL NOTIFIED

SMEAR-POSITIVE

SMEARNEGATIVE/
UNKNOWN

RETREATMENT

EXTRAPULMONARY

CASE TYPE
UNKNOWN

RELAPSE

RETREATMENT
EXCL. RELAPSE

NEW AND
RELAPSE

HISTORY
UNKNOWN

PERCENT NEW
PULMONARY
CASES SMEARPOSITIVE

Afghanistan

28 238

12 947

7 085

6 248

633

1116

209

28 029

Bangladesh

158 252

105 624

21 420

23 438

3 231

2 989

1 550

156 702

Brazil

81 946

37 932

23 030

10 017

18

3 398

7 551

74 395

62

Cambodia

41 628

17 454

8 301

14 239

466

1 168

40 460

68

923 308

429 899

432 868

6 325

39 307

14 909

908 399

50
84

China

65
83

DR Congo

118 636

73 653

14 039

22 340

4 138

4 466

114 170

Ethiopia

156 928

46 634

54 979

50 417

2 664

2 234

154 694

46

1 522 147

630 165

366 381

231 121

1 508

110 691

182 281

1 339 866

63

Indonesia

302 861

183 366

101 247

11 659

4 387

2 202

300 659

64

Kenya

106 083

36 260

41 962

17 382

3 668

6 811

99 272

46

46 174

20 097

16 408

5 621

1 432

2 616

43 558

55

137 403

42 318

56 840

27 976

4 456

5 813

131 590

43

India

Mozambique
Myanmar
Nigeria

90 447

45 416

32 616

3 422

2 667

6 326

84 121

58

Pakistan

269 290

104 263

105 623

45 443

5 870

5 055

261 199

3 036

50

Philippines

174 389

89 198

72 440

1 610

3 075

8 066

166 323

55

Russian
Federation

170 904

31 416

67 894

3 513

8 737

17 741

111 560

41 603

32

South Africa

400 391

128 571

155 071

52 090

18 509

46 150

354 241

45

Thailand

68 239

33 450

20 927

10 135

1 885

1 111

66 397

731

62

Uganda

45 546

23 456

13 567

4 571

1 291

2 661

42 885

63

UR Tanzania

63 453

24 769

21 184

13 715

1 430

2 355

61 098

54

Viet Nam

99 022

52 145

18 237

17 651

6 834

1 574

94 867

2 581

74

Zimbabwe

47 557

11 654

25 157

6 061

1 337

3 348

44 209

32

High-burden
countries

5 052 842

2 180 687

1 677 276

584 994

5 390

230 347

326 197

4 678 694

47 951

57

AFR

1 478 356

597 364

480 665

246 997

642

53 603

98 872

1 379 271

213

55

AMR

226 669

116 828

52 169

32 184

2 130

10 410

12 135

213 721

813

69

EMR

421 384

168 563

137 256

91 947

633

11 201

8 598

409 600

3 186

55

EUR

355 258

81 155

130 897

33 314

387

23 683

37 943

269 436

47 879

38

SEAR

2 332 333

1 046 865

615 258

328 353

4 739

130 714

205 286

2 125 929

1 118

63

WPR

1 341 391

622 211

566 146

61 042

27

54 170

32 875

1 303 596

4 920

52

Global

6 155 391

2 632 986

1 982 391

793 837

8 558

283 781

395 709

5 701 553

58 129

57

Indicates data not available.

India and China accounted for 40% of the 5.7 million


new and relapse cases of TB that were notied in 2010
(24% and 16%, respectively). African countries accounted for a further 24% (of which one quarter were from one
country South Africa). The WHO European and Eastern Mediterranean regions and the Region of the Americas accounted for 16% of new and relapse cases notied
in 2010. The 22 HBCs accounted for 82%.
Among the 22 HBCs, the percentage of new cases
of pulmonary TB that were sputum smear-positive was
relatively low in Zimbabwe (32%), the Russian Federation (32%), Myanmar (43%), South Africa (45%), Kenya
(46%) and Ethiopia (46%). A comparatively high proportion of new cases of pulmonary TB were sputum smearpositive in Bangladesh (83%), the Democratic Republic
of the Congo (84%) and Viet Nam (74%).

30

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Globally, the number of TB cases diagnosed and notied per 100 000 population has stabilized since 2008,
following a marked increase between 2001 and 2007
(Figure 3.1). Globally and in all WHO regions, a clear
gap between the numbers of notied cases and the estimated numbers of incident cases exists, although this is
narrowing, particularly in the Western Pacic Region
(mostly driven by trends in China) and the Region of the
Americas (Figure 3.2). Trends in the 22 HBCs are shown
in Figure 3.3, and for other countries are illustrated in
country pro les that are available online.1

www.who.int/tb/data

FIGURE 3.1

BOX 3.2

Global trends in case notication (black) and estimated TB


incidence (green) rates, 19902010

The start of WHOs efforts to systematically monitor progress in TB control on an annual basis in 1995 coincided with
global promotion and expansion of the DOTS strategy. Data
compiled since then allow assessment of achievements in
TB control since 1995.
Between 1995 and 2010, a total of 55 million TB patients
were treated in programmes that had adopted the DOTS/
Stop TB Strategy; 46 million of these people were successfully treated. Conservative estimates suggest that these
treatments saved around 6.8 million lives, compared with
the pre-DOTS standard of care.1
1

150

Rate per 100 000 population

Achievements in TB care and control at the


global level, 19952010

100

50

Glaziou P et al. Lives saved by tuberculosis control and


prospects for achieving the 2015 global target for reducing
tuberculosis mortality. Bulletin of the World Health Organization,
2011, 89:573582.
0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

FIGURE 3.2

Case notication and estimated TB incidence rates by WHO region, 19902010. Regional trends in case notication rates (new
and relapse cases, all forms) (black) and estimated TB incidence rate (green). Shaded areas represent uncertainty bands.
Africa

The Americas

Eastern Mediterranean

350

120
50

250

100
40

200

80
30

150

Rate per 100 000 population

140

60

300

60

100

20

50

10

20

Europe

40

South-East Asia

Western Pacific

60
200

50
40

150

150
100

30
100
20
50
50

10
0

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

31

FIGURE 3.3

Case notication and estimated TB incidence rates, 22 high-burden countries, 19902010. Trends in case notication rates
(new and relapse cases, all forms) (black) and estimated TB incidence rate (green). Shaded areas represent uncertainty bands.
Brazil

Bangladesh

Afghanistan

China

Cambodia

120
300

250

100

250

200

200

150

60

150
100

100

40

50

50

20

300

200

50

350
300

200

150
100

100
100

200
150

100

100

50

50

50

Myanmar

250

150

150

Mozambique

Kenya

Indonesia

200

200

Rate per 100 000 population

100

250

250

400

250

300
200

150

Indiaa

Ethiopia

DR Congo
400

600

80

50
0

Philippines

Pakistan

Nigeria

500

1000

300

500

400

800
600

300

400

200

500

250

400

400

200

300

300

150

200

200

100

200

100

100

50

100

South Africa

Russian Federation

UR Tanzania

Uganda

Thailand
1000

150
1000

800

150

800

100

600

50
200

150

400

100

200

50

0
1990

Zimbabwe

Viet Nam

200

600
100

400

50

250

1995

2000

2005

2010

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

250
800

200

600

150
100

400

50

200

3.2

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

Estimates for India have not yet been ofcially approved by the Ministry of Health &
Family Welfare, Government of India and should therefore be considered provisional.

Publicprivate and publicpublic mix


(PPM) initiatives

In many countries, especially those with a large private


sector, collaboration with the full range of health care providers is one of the best ways to ensure that all people with
TB are promptly diagnosed, notied to NTPs and provided with standardized care. This is component 4 of the
Stop TB Strategy (Chapter 1); its two subcomponents are:
 involving all public, voluntary, corporate and private
providers through PPM approaches; and
 promoting the International Standards for Tuberculosis Care through PPM initiatives.

32

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Efforts to engage all care providers through PPM initiatives, beyond those which fall under the direct responsibility of the NTP (termed non-NTP providers in this
report), are being introduced and scaled up in many
countries. Demonstrating this progress is not always
possible: it requires systematic recording of the source
of referral and place of TB treatment at the local level,
reporting to the national level and analysis of aggregated
data at the national level.1 However, this recording and
reporting is happening in a growing number of countries
1

WHO recommends that the source of referral and the place of


treatment should be routinely recorded and reported.

TABLE 3.2

Contribution of PPMa to notications of TB cases in 20 countries


WHO REGION AND COUNTRY

TYPES OF NON-NTP CARE PROVIDERS ENGAGED

COVERAGE

NUMBER OF NEW
TB CASES NOTIFIED
IN 2010

CONTRIBUTION TO
TOTAL NOTIFICATIONS OF
NEW TB CASES

AFRICAN REGION
Angola

Diverse private and public providers

Countrywide

15 676

37%

Ghana

Diverse private and public providers

Countrywide

2 032

14%

Kenya

Private clinics and hospitals, NGOs and diverse public


providers

Countrywide

7 706

8.1%

Madagascar

Diverse private and public providers

Countrywide

6 749

29%

Nigeria

Private clinics and hospitals

Countrywide

31 656

39%

UR Tanzania

Private, faith-based organizations and NGO hospitals

Countrywide

11 156

19%

Haiti

Private practitioners, NGOs and prison services

Countrywide

5 030

36%

Peru

Social security organizations and other public and


private providers

Countrywide

5 993

21%

REGION OF THE AMERICAS

EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN REGIONb


Iran (Islamic Republic of)

Diverse private and public providers

Countrywide

4 271

43%

Pakistan

Private clinics and hospitals

Countrywide

51 563

20%

Egypt

Health insurance organizations, NGOs and other public


providers

Countrywide

2 112

24%

Sudan

Diverse private and public providers

Countrywide

2389

9.4%

Prison and military services

Countrywide

1540

4.9%

Bangladesh

Hospitals, medical colleges, prison services and other


public providers

Countrywide

44 732

29%

India

Diverse private, public and NGO providers

14 large cities
(total population
50 million)

35 025

45% of new
smear-positive
cases

Indonesia

Public and private hospitals

Countrywide

48 391

16%

Myanmar

Diverse private, public and NGO providers

Countrywide

24 250

19%

China

General public hospitals

Countrywide

36 7607

42%

Philippines

Private clinics and hospitals

Countrywide

12 081

7.2%

Republic of Korea

Predominantly private providers

Countrywide

33 167

85%

EUROPEAN REGION
Ukraine
SOUTH-EAST ASIA REGION

WESTERN PACIFIC REGION

NGO, non-governmental organization; FBO, Faith-based organization; NTP, national TB control programme.
a
Private providers include private practitioners, private hospitals, private clinics, corporate services and NGOs and non-NTP public providers include hospitals, public
medical colleges, prisons/detention centres and military facilities.
b
For the Eastern Mediterranean Region, data are for the contribution of PPM to all TB cases, not just new cases.

and data for 20 countries are summarized in Table 3.2. In


these 20 countries, the contribution of PPM initiatives
typically ranges from between about one fth to around
40% of total notications, in the geographical areas in
which PPM has been implemented.
NTPs have used a variety of approaches to engage
non-NTP care providers, according to the local context.
These include incentive-based schemes for individual
and institutional providers (in India and Myanmar); a
web-based system for mandatory reporting of TB cases
by all providers (in China); and reimbursement for TB
care delivered by private providers through health insurance, when care conforms with agreed-upon standards

(in the Philippines). It is also noticeable that countries


have prioritized different types of care providers. These
include general public hospitals (in China), private clinics
and hospitals (in Nigeria), social security organizations
(in Peru) and private and NGO hospitals (in the United
Republic of Tanzania). In general, the data illustrate the
relevance of PPM in both African and Asian countries. A
case study from Nigeria is provided in Box 3.3.
Typically, only a small proportion of targeted care providers collaborate actively with NTPs and contribute to
TB case notications in most countries. For this reason,
it is not surprising that NTPs often give rst priority to
engaging institutional providers with whom establishing
WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

33

BOX 3.3
PPM for TB care and control in Nigeria
Health services in Nigeria, including those for care of TB patients, are offered by a range of providers in the public, voluntary
and private sectors. Mission hospitals run by faith-based organizations have a long history of collaboration with the National
Tuberculosis and Leprosy Control Programme (NTBLCP), dating from shortly after the NTBLCPs establishment in 1989. In 1994,
the NTBLCP introduced the DOTS strategy; DOTS was also implemented by mission hospitals, especially in the southern parts
of the country. The private medical sector is estimated to provide health care to up to 60% of the population, although there is
considerable variation within and across states. Private providers manage TB patients but rarely notify them to the NTBLCP.
To enhance access to quality-assured TB care and improve reporting of cases, the Stop TB Strategy was adopted by the NTBLCP
in 2006. Efforts to engage all care providers through PPM approaches began in the same year. After a pilot project implemented
in Anambra State with the support of the German Leprosy and TB Relief Association was successful, PPM was expanded
systematically following WHO guidelines and with nancial support from the Global Fund and the United States Agency for
International Development. A comprehensive national situation assessment was conducted in 2007. Based on the ndings of the
assessment and lessons learnt from the pilot project, national PPM guidelines were developed. A curriculum and training modules
specic to PPM were also prepared. PPM implementation was guided at the national level by a PPM Steering Committee; its
counterparts at the provincial level the State PPM Steering Committees are operational in 12 states. In scaling up PPM and
enabling productive collaboration with private providers, more than 500 medical ofcers, 1000 general health workers and 200
laboratory personnel have been trained. The number of private health facilities collaborating with the NTBLCP increased from
about 100 in 2006 to 451 in 2010.
The expansion of PPM in Nigeria has faced several challenges. Only a proportion of private facilities tend to collaborate. Private
providers have high expectations of incentives and enablers from the programme. An insufcient health work force and the high
attrition rate of staff in private facilities make it difcult to maintain the quality of DOTS implementation. Under-reporting of
patients managed in the private sector remains a problem. Despite these difculties, PPM has helped to increase TB notications
and to improve TB case management in the private sector. In 2010, PPM care providers notied 31 656 cases, equivalent to 39%
of the new TB cases that were notied in the country.
Further strengthening of PPM for TB care and control is planned. Current models of PPM will be evaluated and existing policies and
guidelines reviewed. Advocacy to relevant stakeholders to increase the number of private facilities collaborating with the NTBLCP
will be enhanced. It is anticipated that these efforts will improve access to care, save costs and ensure quality of TB services for
patients seeking private care, while also increasing TB case notications and maintaining high treatment success rates.

collaborative links may be less demanding and, for a given amount of effort, will yield a higher number of notications. At the same time, involving front-line health
workers such as community-based informal providers,
private practitioners and pharmacies who are often the
rst point of contact for people with symptoms of TB
can help to reduce diagnostic delays and the out-of-pocket expenditures of TB patients. The role of pharmacists is
highlighted in Box 3.4.

3.3

Case detection rates

The case detection rate (CDR)1 for TB is an indicator that


is included within the Millennium Development Goals
(Chapter 1). For a given country and year, the CDR is
de ned as the number of new and relapse TB cases (see
Box 3.1 for de nitions) that were diagnosed and notied
by NTPs (Table 3.1), divided by the estimated incident
1

34

The CDR is actually a ratio rather than a rate, but the term
rate has become standard terminology in this context of
this indicator.
It is approximate because of uncertainty in the underlying
incidence of TB and because notied cases are not necessarily
a subset of incident cases that occurred in the same year; see
Chapter 2 for further discussion.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

cases of TB that year. The CDR is expressed as a percentage; it gives an approximate2 indication of the proportion of all incident TB cases that are actually diagnosed,
reported to NTPs and started on treatment.
The best estimate of the CDR for all forms of TB at
global level in 2010 was 65% (range, 6368%), up from
5460% in 2005 and 4045% in 1995 the year in which
the DOTS strategy began to be introduced and expanded
(Table 3.3). The highest CDRs in 2010 were estimated
to be in the Western Pacic Region (best estimate 79%;
range, 7387%), the European Region (best estimate
73%; range, 6878%) and the Region of the Americas
(best estimate 80%; range, 7585%). The other regions
had estimated CDRs in the range 5671%, with best estimates of around 60%. All regions have improved their
estimated CDRs since the mid-1990s, with improvements
particularly evident since 2000. Among the 22 HBCs, the
highest rates of case detection in 2010 were estimated to
be in Brazil, China, Kenya, the Russian Federation and
the United Republic of Tanzania; the lowest rates were
in Mozambique, Nigeria, Afghanistan and Bangladesh.
To close the gap between notied cases and estimated
TB incidence, action is needed in three broad areas:

 Strengthening surveillance. This will help to ensure


that all cases diagnosed with TB are reported and
accounted for by routine notication systems. Establishing links with the full range of health-care providers through PPM, as well as stronger enforcement
of legislation regarding notication of cases (where
this is mandated by law), can help to minimize the
under-reporting of TB cases. Inventory studies can be
used to help quantify the extent to which diagnosed
cases are unreported (the surveillance gap). WHO
and its partners are currently developing guidance on
how these studies can be done, building on pioneering work in implementing such studies in the Eastern
Mediterranean Region and the UK (for further details,
see Chapter 2).
 Better diagnostic capacity. This will help to ensure
that people with TB who seek care are actually diagnosed. It may require better laboratory capacity as well
as more knowledgeable and better trained staff, especially in peripheral-level health-care facilities.
 Improved access to health care. For people with TB

who do not seek care, improved access (in nancial


and/or geographical terms) to health care as well as
improved awareness of how to recognize the signs and
symptoms of TB are important.

3.4

Diagnosis and treatment of MDR-TB

The diagnosis of MDR-TB (de ned as resistance to isoniazid and rifampicin) requires that people with TB are
tested for susceptibility to rst-line anti-TB drugs. The
Global Plan (Chapter 1) includes targets that by 2015
all new cases of TB considered at high risk of MDR-TB
should be tested for drug susceptibility (estimated at
about 20% of all new cases) and that 100% of retreatment cases should be tested (see Box 3.1 for case de nitions).
With the notable exception of the European Region,
drug susceptibility testing (DST) for rst-line drugs was
done for only a small proportion of notied cases in 2010
(Table 3.4). Globally, less than 2% of new cases and 6%
of retreatment cases were tested for MDR-TB, with particularly low levels of testing in the South-East Asia and

BOX 3.4
The role of pharmacists in TB care and control
Pharmacists can play an important role in delivering health care. Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) carried out between
2004 and 2008 show that a high proportion of people seek care from private pharmacies: for example, in India, Nigeria, the
Philippines and the United Republic of Tanzania, 11%, 27%, 24% and 75% of people in the lowest quintile of income had sought
care from private pharmacies for fever, cough or diarrhoea.1 The gures were 78%, 72%, 45% and 36% respectively for private care
providers. A recent study estimating the sale of anti-TB medicines in the private sector found that in 10 high TB-burden countries
(HBCs) that account for 60% of the global burden of disease caused by TB, the amount of anti-TB medicines dispensed in the
private sector was sufcient to treat 66% of the estimated number of new cases of TB that occur each year in these countries. The
same study estimated that the size of the private market in India was equivalent to the number of full treatment courses required
to treat 1.2 times the number of patients reported and treated under the auspices of the Revised National TB Control Programme
(RNTCP).2
To strengthen the contribution of pharmacists to TB care and control, WHOs Stop TB Department has been working with the
International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) a nongovernmental organization (NGO) representing more than 120 national
associations of pharmacists that has an ofcial relationship with WHO (www.
www.p.org
p.org). In September 2011, this collaboration
culminated in the launch of a WHO/FIP Joint Statement on the Role of pharmacists in TB care and control at FIPs annual global
conference in Hyderabad, India. This statement builds on WHOs mandate in public health and FIPs previous collaboration with
WHO on important public health issues including HIV/AIDS, good pharmacy practice and prevention of antimicrobial resistance.
The objective of publishing the statement is to stimulate national TB control programmes (NTPs) and national pharmacy
associations (NPAs) to work together on effectively engaging pharmacists in TB care and control. Pharmacists can contribute in
diverse ways: increasing awareness of TB among their clients, identifying people with symptoms of TB, referring them to a proper
place for diagnosis, supervising and supporting TB patients to enhance treatment adherence, offering anti-TB medicines on valid
prescriptions only and facilitating rational use of anti-TB medicines by prescribing physicians.
Some countries have already developed productive approaches to engaging pharmacists in TB care. In a project in Cambodia, over
a period of three years, participating pharmacists referred 12 577 people with TB symptoms to health care services, among whom
6 403 attended health centres and 1418 were diagnosed with TB. Collaboration between the NTP and the NPA in Ghana helped to
halt the sale of anti-TB medicines in private pharmacies.
Systematic efforts are required to enable NPAs and pharmacists to take on new tasks that could benet TB control and potentially
other health programmes. A logical rst step would be to sensitize NTPs and NPAs on the benets of working together. Countryspecic models of collaboration can then be developed, tested, documented and scaled up. It is hoped that the WHO/FIP joint
statement will help to catalyse such efforts in many countries.
1
2

See www.ps4h.org/globalhealthdata (accessed 13 July 2011).


Wells WA et al. Size and usage patterns of private TB drug markets in the high burden countries. PLoS One, 2011, 6(5): e18964.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

35

TABLE 3.3

Estimates of the case detection rate for all cases (%), 19952010a
1995

2000

BESTb

LOW

HIGH

Afghanistan

HIGH

BEST

LOW

16

14

20

42

35

26

22

32

39

2010
HIGH

BEST

LOW

HIGH

51

47

39

57

32

48

47

39

57
110

21

Brazil

79

66

97

74

61

91

84

71

100

88

74

Cambodia

25

20

32

31

26

37

58

50

67

65

57

77

China

33

27

40

33

28

39

74

65

86

87

77

100

DR Congo

30

25

36

38

32

45

52

45

61

53

46

61

Ethiopia

25

22

29

59

54

66

61

56

67

72

66

78

Indiac

58

51

67

49

44

54

49

44

54

59

53

65

12

21

17

26

59

49

73

66

55

81

67

77

80

76

85

82

79

86

9.4

7.8

26

LOW

Bangladesh

Indonesia

18

2005

BEST

Kenya

61

56

66

72

Mozambique

23

11

Myanmar

11

78

23

13

53

31

20

55

34

25

50

8.5

14

17

14

21

57

49

68

71

62

84

250

12

230

40

23

85

48

65

54

79
79

Nigeria

8.8

2.5

Pakistan

4.5

3.7

5.5

3.7

3.3

2.7

240
4.1

26

9.0

39

32

Philippines

48

40

59

47

39

58

53

44

66

65

54

Russian Federation

53

44

65

79

65

97

83

69

100

73

63

87

South Africa

56

47

69

59

49

72

61

51

75

72

60

88

Thailand

56

46

68

40

33

49

64

53

78

70

59

85

Uganda

22

14

42

29

20

49

47

36

66

61

51

76

UR Tanzania

59

51

69

68

60

78

74

69

80

77

72

82

Viet Nam

37

29

49

56

43

74

56

44

74

54

43

71

Zimbabwe

55

40

80

56

45

71

50

41

64

56

44

72

High-burden countries

39

37

43

40

37

43

55

52

59

65

62

68

AFR

37

30

46

43

36

53

53

46

62

60

56

64

AMR

68

63

73

70

65

75

75

70

80

80

75

85

EMR

23

21

26

25

22

28

47

42

54

63

56

71

EUR

63

58

67

76

71

83

80

75

87

73

68

78
66

SEAR

45

41

50

42

39

45

50

47

54

61

57

WPR

38

33

44

39

35

44

70

64

77

79

73

87

Global

42

40

45

44

41

46

57

54

60

65

63

68

indicates data not available.


a
Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are rened, so they may differ from those published previously.
b
Best, low and high indicate best estimates followed by lower and upper bounds. The lower and upper bounds are dened as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of outcome
distributions produced in simulations.
c
Estimates for India have not yet been ofcially approved by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India and should therefore be considered
provisional.

Western Pacic regions. In the European Region, 51%


of retreatment cases and 30% of the new cases notied
in 2010 were tested for MDR-TB. Among the 27 high
MDR-TB burden countries, the proportion of notied
cases that were tested was relatively high in 13 of the 15
European countries that reported data, ranging from
3% of new cases in Tajikistan to 79% of new cases in
Estonia, and from 23% of retreatment cases in Tajikistan
to over 90% of retreatment cases in Belarus, Latvia and
Ukraine. While data on DST were not available for new
and retreatment cases separately, overall more than 20%
of notied cases were tested for drug resistance in South
Africa (see Annex 2). In the other 11 countries, testing
for MDR-TB among new cases was negligible or no data
were reported. The proportion of retreatment cases that

36

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

were tested in these 11 countries was slightly higher, but


was still under 5% in countries that reported data, with
the one exception of Ethiopia (10%). India and China,
which collectively accounted for almost half of the global cases of MDR-TB estimated to exist among notied
TB patients in 2010, did not report any data (Table 3.5,
column 2). Improving the coverage of diagnostic DST
is urgently needed to improve the diagnosis of MDRTB, and requires strengthening laboratory capacity and
introducing new rapid diagnostic tests (see Chapter 5).
Given low levels of testing for drug resistance in many
countries, and with only 9% of TB basic management
units worldwide providing curative services for MDRTB patients, it is inevitable that the number of people
who are diagnosed with MDR-TB remains low. Glob-

FIGURE 3.4

TABLE 3.4

Notied cases of MDR-TB (20062010) and


projected numbers of patients to be enrolled on
treatment (20112012)a

Diagnostic DST for rifampicin and isoniazid among new


and retreatment cases of TB, 2010
NEW CASES

RETREATMENT CASES

80

Number of patients (thousands)

Non-GLC
60

GLCb
53

40
30
20

2007
(123)

2008
(127)
Notified

Armenia

471

Azerbaijan

493

Bangladesh

29

23

2006
(103)

2009
(134)

2010
(116)

% OF
CASES
WITH DST
RESULT

NUMBER
WITH
DST
RESULT

% OF
CASES
WITH DST
RESULT

54

48

NUMBER
WITH
DST
RESULT

64

2011
(97)

2012
(97)

Projected

35

220

9.6

47

Belarus

1 972

45

1 697

152a

Bulgaria

801

35

165

47

China

DR Congo

100

1.2

<0.1

510

10

45

558

40

Estonia

197

Ethiopia

42
1 987

79

61

77

Numbers under years show the number of countries reporting data.

Georgia

GLC refers to project sites monitored by the Green Light Committee Initiative
and known to adhere to WHO recommended norms in the care of MDR-TB
patients. Non-GLC refers to all other projects that are not supported by the
GLC mechanism, and include patients treated in all high-income countries.

India

Indonesia

324

4.9

Kazakhstan

5 214

33

4 655

Kyrgyzstan

ally, just over 50 000 cases of MDR-TB were notied to


WHO in 2010, mostly by European countries and South
Africa (Table 3.5, Figure 3.4). This represented 18% of
the 290 000 (range, 210 000380 000) cases of MDR-TB
estimated to exist among patients with pulmonary TB
who were notied in 2010. The proportion of TB patients
estimated to have MDR-TB that were actually diagnosed
was under 10% in all of the 27 high MDR-TB countries
outside the European Region, with the notable exception of South Africa where 81% of estimated cases were
diagnosed. In the 15 high MDR-TB burden countries in
the European Region, the proportion of estimated cases
that were diagnosed ranged from 24% (in Tajikistan) to
over 90% of cases (in Belarus and Kazakhstan); no data
were reported from Lithuania. In the Russian Federation, which ranks third in terms of estimated numbers
of cases of MDR-TB at the global level, the proportion of
estimated cases that were diagnosed was 44% in 2010.
The numbers of patients diagnosed with MDR-TB and
started on treatment with recommended second-line
drug regimens in the high MDR-TB burden countries
in 2010, at just under 40 000, was less than the number
of cases notied.
Although the absolute numbers of TB cases tested for
drug resistance, diagnosed with MDR-TB and started on
appropriate treatment remain low, they are increasing
(Figure 3.4). The reported number of patients enrolled on
treatment for MDR-TB reached 45 553 in 2010, equivalent to 16% of the estimated 290 000 cases of MDR-TB
among TB patients notied in 2010. According to country
plans, further increases are expected in 2011 and 2012,
although these show very small increases compared with
2010. The scale-up of diagnosis and treatment for MDRTB falls far short of the targets set out in the Global Plan

Latvia

613

74

51

102

94

Lithuania

Myanmar

Nigeria

27

<0.1

19

0.2

Pakistan

<0.1

306

2.8

Philippines

<0.1

297

2.7

Republic of Moldova

1 234

33

1 077

64

Russian Federation

35 862

35

13 405

51

South Africa
Tajikistan

160

2.7

223

23

Ukraine

9 194

29

4 840

95

Uzbekistan

2 845

18

1 180

26

Viet Nam
High MDR-TB burden
countries

61 124

1.5

29 739

5.5

AFR

2 732

0.2

4 294

AMR

10 229

5.0

4 182

EMR

2 323

0.6

1 250

EUR

74 820

SEAR

1 073

0.1

925

WPR

4 392

0.4

1 350

1.6

95 569

1.8

43 273

6.4

Global

30

31 272

2.8
19
6.3
51
0.3

Indicates data not available.


a
The percentage may exceed 100% if notication of TB cases is incomplete,
especially in systems where reporting of TB and DST are not linked. In addition,
DST may be performed repeatedly in the same patients.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

37

TABLE 3.5

Number of cases of MDR-TB estimated, notied and expected to be treated, 27 high MDR-TB burden
countries and WHO regions
ESTIMATED CASES
OF MDR-TB AMONG
NOTIFIED CASES OF
PULMONARY TB IN
2010a (A)

Armenia

NOTIFIED CASES
OF MDR-TB IN
2010 (B)

CONFIDENCE INTERVAL

260

230290

177

NOTIFIED CASES OF
MDR-TB AS % OF ESTIMATED
CASES OF MDR-TB AMONG
ALL NOTIFIED CASES OF
PULMONARY TB IN 2010
(B/A)b

68

CASES
ENROLLED
ON
TREATMENT
FOR MDR-TB
IN 2010

154

EXPECTED NUMBER
OF CASES OF MDR-TB
TO BE TREATED

2011

2012

160

160

Azerbaijan

1 700

1 5001 800

63

3.7

286

500

500

Bangladesh

5 900

4 4007 400

184

3.1

339

1 558

2 597

Belarus

1 700

1 6001 800

1 576

93

200

Bulgaria

94

71120

56

60

56

60

65

63 000

56 00070 000

2 792

4.4

1 222

6 706

7 061

3.2

191

220

63

80

64

120

836

1 218

618

550

550

2 967

7 800

15 000
900

China
DR Congo

2 700

1905 200

87

Estonia

76

6192

63

Ethiopia

2 100

1 1003 000

140

Georgia

680

620740

359

64 000

44 00084 000

2 967

Indonesia

6 100

3 9008 400

182

142

600

Kazakhstan

6 400

5 9006 900

7 387

115

5 705

Kyrgyzstan

1 000

8801 200

566

57

566

100

81120

87

87

87

125

125

280

Myanmar

5 100

3 8006 300

192

3.8

192

200

400

Nigeria

2 400

1704 700

21

0.9

23

80

100

Pakistan

9 700

4 00015 000

444

4.6

444

750

1 000

Philippines

8 800

6 70011 000

522

5.9

548

3 500

2 372

Republic of Moldova

1 700

1 6001 800

1 015

60

791

Russian Federation

17 000

India

Latvia
Lithuania

83
6.7
53
4.6
3.0

31 000

24 00038 000

13 692

44

13 692

11 400

South Africa

9 100

7 70010 000

7 386

81

5 402

6 400

Tajikistan

1 400

1 1001 700

333

24

245

700

300

Ukraine

6 600

5 9007 300

5 333

81

3 870

Uzbekistan

3 100

2 2004 000

1 023

33

628

972

1 080

Viet Nam

3 600

2 9004 300

101

101

700

1 500

250 000

160 000340 000

46 748

19

38 652

44 177

51 992

AFR

32 000

11 00053 000

9 504

30

7 406

10 432

8 395

AMR

6 200

1 90010 000

2 158

35

3 186

3 337

3 322

EMR

14 000

6 20023 000

829

1 006

1 135

1 561

EUR

53 000

39 00068 000

32 616

27 844

15 593

20 714

SEAR

88 000

68 000110 000

3 779

3 901

12 240

18 980

High MDR-TB burden countries

WPR
Global

77 000

61 00093 000

4 222

290 000

210 000380 000

53 108

2.8

5.9
62
4.3
5.5
18

2 210

11 285

11 352

45 553

54 022

64 324

Indicates data not available.


a
Calculated by applying the best combined estimate of MDR to the notied cases of pulmonary TB in 2010.
b
Percentage may exceed 100% as a result of notications of cases from previous years, inadequate linkages between notication systems for TB and MDR-TB, and
estimates of the number of cases of MDR-TB that are too conservative.

38

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

FIGURE 3.5

Notied cases of MDR-TB (20072010) and projected numbers of patients to be enrolled on treatment (20112012) in the
149 countries included in the Global Plan, compared with the targets included in the Global Plan to Stop TB 20112015.
The numbers represent smear and/or culture-positive cases of MDR-TB.
Number of patients (thousands)

300

Projected enrolments
Global Plan targets

250

Non-GLC
200

GLC

150
100
50
0

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

(Figure 3.5). Approaching these targets will require rapid


expansion of diagnosis and treatment, notably in China
and India.

3.5

Treatment outcomes

When the DOTS strategy was introduced in the mid1990s, emphasis was given to the recording and reporting of treatment outcomes among patients with sputum
smear-positive pulmonary TB: that is, the most infectious cases. Although efforts have been made to record
and report the outcomes of treatment for other cases,
the data for such cases are still incomplete. Among
the countries reporting to WHO in 2010, 162 reported
data on treatment outcomes among smear-negative and
extrapulmonary cases.
As in previous reports in this series, the best available data on treatment outcomes are for sputum smearpositive cases of pulmonary TB (Table 3.6; for de nitions
of the categories used to report treatment outcomes see
Box 3.6). Globally, the rate of treatment success for the
2.6 million new cases of sputum smear-positive pulmonary TB who were treated in the 2009 cohort was 87%
(Table 3.6). This was the third successive year that the
target of 85% ( rst set by the World Health Assembly in
1991) was exceeded globally. Among WHOs six regions,
three met or exceeded the 85% target: the Eastern Mediterranean Region, the South-East Asia Region and the
Western Pacic Region. The treatment success rate was
81% in the African Region (where there has been steady
improvement since 1997), 76% in the Region of the
Americas (where the rate has been relatively stable since
2002) and 66% in the European Region (where major
efforts to increase treatment success rates are needed).
Of the 22 HBCs, 15 reached the 85% target. The seven
countries that reported lower rates of treatment success
were Brazil (72%), Ethiopia (84%), Nigeria (83%), the
Russian Federation (55%), South Africa (77%), Uganda (67%) and Zimbabwe (78%). In Brazil and Uganda,
low rates reect a high proportion of patients for whom
the outcome of treatment was not evaluated (11% and
16%, respectively) and high default rates (11% and 10%,

2013

2014

2015

BOX 3.5
Infection control to prevent the
transmission of TB
Outbreaks of MDR-TB and extensively drug-resistant TB
(XDR-TB) in health-care facilities have highlighted the
importance of proper infection control. Appropriate measures include personal protection (for example, masks),
administrative controls (for example, in waiting areas for
people attending outpatient services) and environmental
measures such as ventilation systems. The best indicator
to assess the quality of infection control in health-care
settings is the ratio of the notication rate of TB among
health-care workers to the notication rate among the
general population (with appropriate adjustments for the
age distribution of the two groups). This ratio should be
approximately 1. The data required to calculate this indicator for 2010 were limited, and collection and reporting need
to be improved. WHO is currently leading the development
of guidance material on how to establish surveillance of TB
among health-care workers.
Among the 149 low and middle-income countries from
which data on infection control were requested, 34 had
conducted a national assessment of infection control for
TB, 49 had conducted an assessment of infection control
in tertiary hospitals and 45 had a national plan for infection control (a plan was under development in a further 39
countries). Training related to infection control was implemented in 78 of these countries in 2010 and 79 had a focal
point for infection control in at least one tertiary hospital.

respectively). In the Russian Federation, treatment failure rates are high, possibly linked to MDR-TB.
National data on treatment outcomes for cases of
MDR-TB are limited. Data for cohorts of at least 200
patients are currently limited to 14 countries (Figure 3.6).
Rates of treatment success are variable, ranging from
below 50% (in the Republic of Moldova, South Africa
and Romania) to 74% (in Kazakhstan). Most of these
countries thus remain far from the Global Plan target of
a treatment success rate of *75% as a result of high frequencies of treatment failure, death and default.
WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

39

TABLE 3.6

Treatment success for new smear-positive cases (%) and cohort size (thousands), 19952009
a. Treatment success (%)
1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

Afghanistan
Bangladesh
Brazil
Cambodia
China
DR Congo
Ethiopia
India
Indonesia
Kenya
Mozambique
Myanmar
Nigeria
Pakistan
Philippines
Russian Federation
South Africa
Thailand
Uganda
UR Tanzania
Viet Nam
Zimbabwe

71
17
91
93
74
61
25
91
75
39
67
49
70
60
65
58
64
44
73
89
53

63
20
94
94
48
71
21
81
77
55
79
32

35
57
61
78
33
76
89
32

45
73
27
91
95
64
72
18
54
65
65
82
73
67
78
67
68
58
40
77
85
69

33
77
40
95
95
70
74
27
58
77

82
73
23
71
68
72
68
62
76
92
70

86
79
78
93
95
69
74
21
50
79
71
81
75
70
87
65
57
77
61
78
92
73

85
81
71
91
93
78
80
34
87
80
75
82
79
74
88
68
63
69
63
78
92
69

84
83
55
92
95
77
76
54
86
80
78
81
79
77
88
67
61
75
56
81
93
71

87
84
80
92
92
78
76
60
86
79
78
81
79
78
88
67
68
74
60
80
92
67

86
85
77
93
93
83
70
76
87
80
76
81
78
79
88
61
67
73
68
81
92
66

89
90
76
91
94
85
79
82
90
80
77
84
73
82
87
60
69
74
70
81
93
54

90
91
76
93
94
85
78
86
91
82
79
84
75
83
89
58
71
75
73
82
92
68

84
92
73
93
94
86
84
86
91
85
83
84
76
88
88
58
74
77
70
85
93
60

87
92
72
94
94
87
84
87
91
85
79
85
82
91
89
58
74
83
75
88
92
78

88
91
71
95
94
87
84
87
91
85
84
85
78
90
88
57
76
82
70
88
92
74

86
92
72
95
95
88
84
88
91
86
85
85
83
91
89
55
77
86
67
88
92
78

High-burden countries

53

50

56

62

60

67

72

75

81

84

86

87

87

87

88

AFR
AMR
EMR
EUR
SEAR
WPR

60
50
79
67
33
80

56
51
66
58
31
72

64
58
73
72
29
91

70
67
57
63
40
92

68
79
79
75
34
91

71
76
81
75
50
90

70
69
82
74
63
91

73
81
84
74
68
90

73
80
82
75
79
91

74
79
83
70
84
91

76
79
83
72
87
92

75
76
86
70
87
92

80
79
88
71
88
92

80
77
88
70
88
92

81
76
88
67
89
93

Global

57

54

60

64

64

69

73

76

80

83

85

84

86

86

87

b. Cohort size (thousands)


1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

Afghanistan
Bangladesh
Brazil
Cambodia
China
DR Congo
Ethiopia
India
Indonesia
Kenya
Mozambique
Myanmar
Nigeria
Pakistan
Philippines
Russian Federation
South Africa
Thailand
Uganda
UR Tanzania
Viet Nam
Zimbabwe

11
46
4.4
131
16
5.1
265
3.0
6.5
11
7.9
9.5
0.8
90
0.05
28
20
15
20
38
9.7

30
45
9.1
175
25
11
291
12
13
13
9.7
24

126
43
45
0.1
15
21
48
12

2.0
34
43
12
189
26
12
293
21
19
11
9.2
11
2.8
27
0.7
55
3.7
18
22
54
12

2.9
38
30
13
210
33
15
284
40
22

10
13
29
21
0.7
37
8
13
24
55
13

2.0
38
27
16
208
35
21
345
46
27
12
12
15
3
37
1.5
81
14
14
24
53
13

3.1
38
34
15
214
36
30
349
52
28
13
17
16
4.1
50
3.6
86
23
14
24
53
14

6.3
41
41
14
190
41
32
384
54
31
14
21
17
6.3
55
4.1
101
20
17
24
54
17

7.8
47
29
17
194
45
37
396
76
31
15
24
21
15
59
5.2
99
27
19
24
57
16

6.8
54
38
19
267
54
40
420
93
34
16
27
28
20
68
6.3
114
28
20
25
56
14

10
63
43
19
385
62
41
489
129
41
17
31
34
32
78
26
127
28
21
26
58
15

10
85
42
21
473
65
39
507
159
40
18
37
35
48
81
26
135
30
21
25
55
13

12
102
48
19
470
63
37
553
175
39
18
40
40
66
86
31
140
29
20
25
56
16

13
104
38
19
466
66
38
592
161
38
18
43
44
89
87
32
143
30
21
25
54
11

13
106
41
20
464
66
41
616
166
37
19
41
46
100
85
32
144
33
23
24
53
10

12
109
41
18
449
72
45
625
169
37
20
42
45
102
89
32
135
28
23
25
51
10

High-burden countries

739

967

879

912

1 044

1 119

1 186

1 260

1 450

1 776

1 965

2 087

2 132

2 181

2 179

AFR
AMR
EMR
EUR

178
129
46
34

233
134
51
94

268
125
60
24

235
111
89
48

323
110
66
22

365
111
64
41

409
102
52
50

452
105
76
54

491
110
81
60

552
121
98
75

564
119
114
81

566
132
132
98

577
116
156
108

591
109
167
114

602
122
167
91

SEAR
WPR

318
296

360
372

376
294

399
313

473
353

512
360

550
346

604
357

661
439

780
575

856
663

938
663

974
661

1 011
657

1 022
632

1 001

1 245

1 147

1 195

1 347

1 453

1 510

1 649

1 842

2 200

2 396

2 529

2 591

2 649

2 637

Global
Indicates no data reported.

40

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

BOX 3.6

BOX 3.7

Denitions of treatment outcomes for


patients treated for drug-susceptible TB used
for reporting at global level
Cured A patient who was initially smear-positive and who was
smear-negative in the last month of treatment and on at least
one previous occasion.
Completed treatment A patient who completed treatment
but did not meet the criteria for cure or failure. This denition applies to pulmonary smear-positive and smear-negative
patients and to patients with extrapulmonary disease.
Died A patient who died from any cause during treatment.
Failed A patient who was initially smear-positive and who
remained smear-positive at month 5 or later during treatment.
Defaulted A patient whose treatment was interrupted for 2
consecutive months or more.
Not evaluated A patient whose treatment outcome is not
known.
Successfully treated A patient who was cured or who
completed treatment.
Cohort A group of patients in whom TB has been diagnosed,
and who were registered for treatment during a specied time
period (e.g. the cohort of new smear-positive cases registered
in the calendar year 2005). This group forms the denominator
for calculating treatment outcomes. The sum of the above
treatment outcomes, plus any cases for whom no outcome is
recorded (including those still on treatment in the European
Region) should equal the number of cases registered. Some
countries monitor outcomes among cohorts dened by smear
and/or culture, and dene cure and failure according to the
best laboratory evidence available for each patient.

Denitions of treatment outcomes for


patients treated for MDR-TB
The categories used to assess treatment outcomes for
patients with MDR-TB are the same as those for patients
with drug-susceptible TB (see Box 3.6). The main differences are the denitions of cure and failure, which are
recognized to be too complex for routine surveillance. In
2011, WHO initiated a consultation on updating the de nitions of cases and treatment outcomes in the context
of new diagnostic tests. It is anticipated that updated
denitions will be agreed upon by the end of 2011. The
denitions for cured and failed that are currently in use
are summarized below.
Cured A patient who has completed a course of anti-TB
treatment according to programme protocol and has at
least ve consecutive negative cultures from samples
collected at least 30 days apart in the nal 12 months of
treatment. If only one positive culture is reported during
that time, and there is no concomitant clinical evidence
of deterioration, a patient may still be considered cured,
provided that this positive culture is followed by a
minimum of three consecutive negative cultures taken
at least 30 days apart.
Failed Anti-TB treatment will be considered to have
failed if two or more of the ve cultures recorded in the
nal 12 months of therapy are positive, or if any one of
the nal three cultures is positive. Treatment will also
be considered to have failed if a clinical decision has
been made to terminate treatment early because of
poor clinical or radiological response or adverse events.
These latter failures can be indicated separately in order
to do sub-analysis.

FIGURE 3.6

Treatment outcomes for patients diagnosed with MDR-TB in 14 countries, 2008 cohorts. The total number of patients starting
treatment in each cohort is shown under each country.a
100

Not evaluated
Defaulted

Percentage of cohort

80

Failed
Died

60

Successfully
treated

40
20
0
Kazakhstan
(2268)

Turkey
(263)

Uzbekistan Ecuador
(294)
(210)

Georgia
(417)

DR Congo Philippines Namibia Russian


(202)
(520)
(221) Federation
(1537)

Brazil
(444)

Kyrgyzstan Republic
South
(262)
of Moldova Africa
(522)
(4383)

Romania
(816)

Only countries reporting outcomes for >200 MDR-TB cases with <20% not evaluated are shown. Countries are ranked by the proportion successfully treated
(cured+completed).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

41

CHAPTER 4

Financing TB care and control

KEY MESSAGES
 In 2012, funding for TB control is expected to reach
US$ 3.3 billion in the 22 high-burden countries (HBCs)
that account for 80% of the worlds TB cases, up from
US$ 1.3 billion in 2002.
 Among 97 countries for which trends can be assessed
since 2006, funding is expected to reach US$ 4.4 billion in
2012. This is an increase from US$ 3.5 billion in 2006, but
funding has levelled off since 2009.
 Almost three quarters of the funding for TB control
in the 22 HBCs is accounted for by domestic funding in
BRICS (Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China and
South Africa). However, in the other 17 HBCs, donor
funding increased more than six-fold during the period
20022010, accounting for about half of the total TB
expenditures of US$ 0.6 billion in these countries in 2010.
 International donor funding for TB control has
increased by 50% since 2006, from US$ 0.4 billion to an
expected US$ 0.6 billion in 2012, but still falls far short
of funding for malaria (US$ 1.8 billion in 2009) and HIV
(US$ 6.9 billion in 2010).
 Across 97 countries that reported data, the Global
Fund is expected to account for 82% of the US$ 0.6 billion
of donor funding for TB in 2012. Overall, donor funding
accounted for 14% of total funding.
 Funding for MDR-TB has increased since 2009, but
large funding gaps constrain plans to scale up diagnosis
and treatment.
 Funding gaps reported by national TB control
programmes for 2012 amount to US$ 0.8 billion, of which
US$ 0.5 billion is accounted for by the 22 HBCs.
 Funding gaps in the 17 HBCs outside BRICS could be
halved, from US$ 0.4 billion to US$ 0.2 billion, if donor
funding for BRICS was redirected to these countries. The
US$ 0.2 billion per year of donor funding for BRICS is
almost sufcient to scale up the diagnosis and treatment
of MDR-TB in low-income countries according to the
targets included in the Global Plan to Stop TB 20112015.
 Expenditure tracking and reporting need to be
improved; 3 HBCs have been unable to report expenditure
data for at least the past two years.

42

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Progress in TB prevention, care and control requires


adequate funding. WHO began monitoring of funding for TB in 2002, and the global TB database holds
data from 2002 up to 2012. The data compiled to date
allow assessment of trends in funding during the period
20022012 in the 22 high-burden countries (22 HBCs)
that account for about 80% of the worlds TB cases, and
for a much larger set of countries since 2006. The rst
part of this chapter summarizes trends in funding for TB
in the 22 HBCs, quanties the funding gaps reported by
these countries, compares levels of domestic and international funding, and summarizes estimates of the cost per
patient treated. The second part of the chapter assesses a
similar set of data for a group of 97 countries (22 HBCs
and 75 other countries). Ambitious targets for scaling
up diagnosis and treatment of multidrug-resistant TB
(MDR-TB) between 2011 and 2015 have been set (Chapter 1), but the costs of treatment are several times higher
than those for drug-susceptible TB. In this context, the
third part of the chapter gives special attention to the
funding needs, sources of funding and funding gaps for
MDR-TB. The nal part of the chapter compares available funding for TB with the resource requirements set
out in the Global Plan to Stop TB 20112015.

4.1

Funding for TB care and control in the


22 high-burden countries

The funding available for TB control in the 22 HBCs


has increased year-on-year since 2002, and is expected to reach US$ 3.3 billion in 2012 (Figure 4.1, Figure
4.2, Figure 4.3). Most of this funding has been used to
support diagnosis and treatment with rst-line drugs
(labelled DOTS in Figure 4.1). However, it is noticeable that funding for the diagnosis and treatment of
MDR-TB has increased since 2009, and is expected to
reach US$ 0.6 billion in 2012 (Figure 4.1). This may be
linked to increasing political commitment following a
high-level ministerial conference on MDR-TB that was
held in Beijing, China, in April 2009. The relatively small
amounts of funding reported for collaborative TB/HIV
activities (see Chapter 6 for further details) reect the fact
that funding for most of these interventions (including
the most expensive, antiretroviral treatment) is usually
channelled to national HIV programmes and nongovernmental organizations rather than to national TB control programmes (NTPs).

FIGURE 4.1

FIGURE 4.2

Funding available for TB control by line item,


22 high-burden countries, 20022012

Funding available for TB control by source of funding,


22 high-burden countries, 20022012
3.3

2.6

2.5
2.2
2
1.6

1.8

3.1
US$ billions (constant 2011 US$)

US$ billions (constant 2011 US$)

3.1
2.9

3
2.3

1.9

1.3
1

2.6

2.5
2.3

2.2
2
1.6

1.8

1.9

1.3
1

0
2002

2003 2004

2005 2006

2007 2008

General health-care services: MDR-TB


General health-care services: DOTS
Other
PPM/PAL/ACSM/CBC/OR/surveys
a

3.3

2.9

2009

2010

2011

2002 2003

2012

2004 2005

2006

2007 2008

2009 2010

2011

2012

Global Fund
Grants (excluding Global Fund)
Government, general health-care services
Government, NTP budget (including loans)

TB/HIV
MDR-TB
DOTSa

DOTS includes the available funding for rst-line drugs, NTP staff, programme
management and supervision, and laboratories.

FIGURE 4.3

Funding available for TB control by country,


22 high-burden countries, 20022012
3.3
US$ billions (constant 2011 US$)

3.1
2.9

3
2.5

2
1.6

1.8

2.2

2.3

2006

2007 2008

2.6

1.9

1.3
1

0
2002 2003

2004 2005

All other HBCs


Brazil

India
China

2009

2010

2011

2012

South Africa
Russian Federation

FIGURE 4.4

Funding gaps reported by NTPs, 22 high-burden countries,


20062012
600

Other

552
US$ millions (constant 2011 US$)

Across all of the 22 HBCs, domestic funding from


national governments is the single largest source of funding (Figure 4.2), accounting for 87% of total expected
funding in 2012.1 Nonetheless, the Global Fund has contributed a growing amount of funding since 2004, and is
expected to reach US$ 362 million in 2012. The Global
Fund is now easily the largest source of donor funding
for TB; funding from other donor sources is expected to
amount to only US$ 86 million in 2012.
In absolute terms, 60% of the funding expected for
TB in the 22 HBCs in 2012 is accounted for by just two
countries: the Russian Federation and South Africa (Figure 4.3). Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China
and South Africa (BRICS) account for 83% of expected
funding, with 60% of all notied cases in the 22 HBCs
(Chapter 3). Funding expected in the remaining 17 HBCs
(which accounted for 40% of notied cases in HBCs in
2010) amounts to US$ 571 million in 2012, equivalent to
17% of the total funding expected in the 22 HBCs.
Despite increases in funding and 10 completed rounds
of proposals2 to the Global Fund, NTPs in the 22 HBCs
continue to report funding gaps (Figure 4.4). Since 2007,
these gaps have been in the range US$ 0.40.5 billion per
year. In 2012, funding gaps are anticipated for several elements of TB care and control, including rst-line drugs
(for which the gap amounts to US$ 48 million in 2012).

500

458

522

471
419

437

ACSM/CBC/PPM/
PAL/OR/surveys
TB/HIV

400

MDR-TB

300

DOTS, excluding
first-line drugs
DOTS, first-line drugs

200

183

100
0

Domestic funding includes funding for outpatient visits and


inpatient care in hospitals, the costs of which are not usually
included in NTP budgets and expenditures. The amount of
domestic funding for these inputs to TB treatment are estimated by combining data on the average number of outpatient
visits and days in hospital per TB patient reported by countries with WHO estimates of the unit costs of outpatient visits
and bed-days (see www.who.int/choice).
The rst round was completed in 2003. Round 10 was completed in 2010.

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

43

TABLE 4.1

NTP budgets, available funding, cost of utilization of general health-care services and total funding required according to
country plans, 2012 (US$ millions)
AVAILABLE FUNDING

NTP BUDGET

GOVERNMENT
(EXCLUDING
LOANS)

LOANS

GRANTS
(EXCLUDING
GLOBAL FUND)

Afghanistan

11

0.4

3.7

Bangladesh

48

1.2

2.2

Brazil

87

Cambodia

40

China

71
1.2

GLOBAL FUND

4.5
10

FUNDING GAPa

2.0
35

COST OF
GENERAL
HEALTH-CARE
SERVICES
(ESTIMATED)b

5.2

16

5.1

53

1.4

0.9

13

8.9

4.5

26

4.8

3.6

32

95

TOTAL FUNDING
REQUIREDc

75

162
45

350

220

DR Congo

62

Ethiopia

52

8.8

15

15

13

13

64

0.7

350
63

India

210

43

87

80

84

293

Indonesia

102

16

0.2

47

39

19

121

6.1

1.7

0.5

12

33

Kenya

53

Mozambique

39

1.9

0.7

Myanmar

29

0.6

2.0

Nigeria

43

6.6

6.8

Pakistan

64

2.8

2.9

Philippines

79

24

1 204

1 204

34

4.5

3.2

Russian Federation
South Africa

19

2.8

15

8.1

19

13
5.7
24
0

17
53

8.8
10
2.9
24
5.9

62
49
32
67
70

31

58

137

35

1 239

Thailand

45

Uganda

20

0.1

0.2

2.4

3.5

14

0.3

20

UR Tanzania

42

7.3

6.8

5.2

23

2.4

45

9.2

Viet Nam
Zimbabwe

74

1.0

3.5

3.4

48

4.6

59

26

100

90

80

343

425

383

3 036

High-burden countriesd

2 653

1 654

AFRe

1 035

590

4.0

65

143

233

355

1 390

AMR

175

111

12

17

35

151

327

EMR

168

63

8.9

30

67

64

233

EUR

1 632

1 339

2.1

51

240

347

1 979

87

SEAR

449

105

WPR

595

309

4 054

2 517

Globale

1.0
92

15

147

95

108

557

14

121

149

183

777

117

509

819

1 209

5 263

indicates not available.


a
Calculated as the NTP budget minus all the available funding.
b
See text for an explanation of how these costs are estimated.
c
Calculated as the NTP budget plus the cost of utilization of general health-care services.
d
These totals do not include estimates for DR Congo, South Africa and Zimbabwe and are therefore lower than those in Figures 4.14.5.
e
The regional and global totals include estimates for those countries that did not report data for 2012 and are in constant 2011 US$, consistent with totals presented
elsewhere in this report.

Trends in funding, funding gaps and expenditures


in the 22 HBCs as a whole conceal important variation
among countries, and differences between BRICS and
the other 17 HBCs are especially striking (Table 4.1, Figure 4.5, Figure 4.6).
The funding estimated to be required in BRICS has
steadily increased since 2002 (see blue line in Figure 4.5),
and the available funding has kept pace (see orange line
in Figure 4.5). In the other 17 HBCs, the amount of funding estimated to be required and the funding available
have also increased, but large funding gaps have persisted
and widened over the past decade. The 17 HBCs outside
BRICS have reported a funding gap of US$ 0.4 billion

44

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

in 2012, ranging from US$ 2 million in Afghanistan to


US$ 59 million in Viet Nam (Table 4.1). Funding gaps
in the 17 HBCs outside BRICS could be halved in 2012,
from US$ 0.4 billion to US$ 0.2 billion, if all donor funding for BRICS was redirected to these countries.
In BRICS, most funding (95% in 2010) for NTPs
comes from domestic sources (Figure 4.6), although India
was an outlier at around 50%.1 In the other 17 HBCs,
only 33% of the funding for NTPs was from domestic
sources in 2010. When the resources that are used to pro1

Further details for individual countries can be found in Annex


2, and in nance country pro les for around 100 countries
that are available online at www.who.int/tb/data.

FIGURE 4.5

Funding requireda and funding available for TB control, 22 high-burden countries, 20022012
BRICSb

Other 17 high-burden countries

3000

3000

Funding required:
country-reported value
or best estimate
595th percentile
range of estimates

2589

US$ millions (constant 2011 US$)

2575

2000

2000

1000

1000

Funding available:
country-reported value
or best estimate
595th percentile
range of estimates

971

557

0
2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

0
2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

Funding required is the sum of the funds needed to fully fund NTP budgets plus the funds needed for outpatient visits and hospital stays (general health-care services)
if these are not already included in NTP budgets. The difference between the funding required and the funding available is the funding gap reported by NTPs.

Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China and South Africa.

FIGURE 4.6

TB expenditures by source of funding,a 22 high-burden countries, 20022010


BRICS:b NTP

BRICS:b NTP + GHSc


2500

2000

2000
1500

1640

US$ millions (constant 2011 US$)

1000

2046

1500

Grants:
country-reported value or best estimate
595th percentile range of estimates

1000

500

77
0
2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

500

300

200

200

149

2004

2006

2008

2006

2008

400

300

0
2002

2004

2010

Other 17 high-burden countries: NTP + GHSc


309

100

77

0
2002

Other 17 high-burden countries: NTP


400

Domestic funding (government


including loans):
country-reported value or best estimate
595th percentile range of estimates

2010

327

309

100
0
2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

Total expenditures may be less than funding available in Figure 4.5, as not all funding commitments translate into disbursements and not all disbursements translate
into expenditures.

Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China and South Africa.

GHS is the cost of resources used for TB treatment in the general health system that are not usually managed by the NTP. It includes the costs associated with hospital
stays and outpatient visits.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

45

FIGURE 4.7

Cost per TB patient treated with rst-line drugs,a 22 high-burden countries,b 2004 and 2010c

10000
RU

Cost per patient (constant 2011 US$)

5000

2000
ZA BR

1000

 The size of the orange circle is proportional to the


number of cases treated in 2010.
The tail attached to each circle depicts the change in
cost per patient and GNI per capita between 2004 and
2010.
 The grey area depicts the 95% condence interval for
the prediction (= white line) of the unweighted loglog
regression of cost per patient on GNI per capita in 2010.
The green line marks where cost per patient equals GNI
per capita.

TH

500

200

CD

AF TZ
ET MZ BD

NG

KE
PK

Costs include all resources used for treatment (not only


rst-line drugs), i.e. all items included in Figure 4.1 with
the exception of those for MDR-TB.

AF Afghanistan; BD Bangladesh; BR Brazil; CN China;


CD Democratic Republic of the Congo; ET Ethiopia;
ID Indonesia; IN India; KE Kenya; KH Cambodia;
MM Myanmar; MZ Mozambique; NG Nigeria;
PK Pakistan; PH Philippines; RU Russian Federation;
TH Thailand; TZ United Republic of Tanzania;
UG Uganda; VN Viet Nam; ZA South Africa;
ZW Zimbabwe.

Costs per patient treated are based on 3-year averages,


20022004 and 20082010, to minimize distortions
associated with non-annual expenses on items such as
buildings, equipment and buffer stocks of drugs.

PH

ID

UG
ZW

100

VN

KH

CN

IN

MM
50

100

200

500

1000

2000

5000

10000

GNI per capita (constant 2011 US$)

vide TB diagnosis and treatment within the general health


system (that is, the staff and health facilities used for
outpatient and inpatient care) are added to the resources
included in NTP budgets, the share of funds contributed
from domestic sources increases in both sets of countries
(Figure 4.6). Nonetheless, the share still only reached 51%
in the 17 countries outside BRICS in 2010.1 Between 2009
and 2010 there was a marked reduction in expenditures in
BRICS (driven by the Russian Federation although there
were falls in spending in Brazil and China as well), and
expenditures also declined in Mozambique and Viet Nam.
The estimated cost per patient treated for TB with
rst-line drugs is shown for each of the 22 HBCs in Figure 4.7. The cost generally lies in the range US$ 100
500 per patient treated. The exceptions are Myanmar
(under US$ 100), Thailand (US$ 830) and Brazil, the
Russian Federation and South Africa (above US$ 1000).
Between 2004 and 2010, the cost per patient treated has
increased in almost all of the HBCs, as has GNI [gross
national income] per capita, with the exception of Indonesia and Mozambique. It is noticeable that in all of the
HBCs, the cost per patient treated is less than GNI per
capita (that is, all values lie below the solid green line in
Figure 4.7). Besides GNI, a further explanation for variation in costs appears to be the scale at which treatment
is provided. Some of the countries with relatively low
costs for their income level (for example, China, India,
Indonesia and Pakistan) are countries where the total
number of patients treated each year is comparatively
1

46

Further details for individual countries can be found in Annex


2, and in nance country pro les for around 100 countries
that are available online at www.who.int/tb/data.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

high (as shown by the size of the circles in Figure 4.7).


As in previous years, the cost of treating TB patients
with rst-line drugs in the Russian Federation is higher
than might be expected for the countrys income level.
The relatively high cost is due in large part to an extensive network of hospitals and sanatoria that are used for
lengthy inpatient care. Nevertheless, there is evidence
that some costs are starting to fall, with decreasing
expenditures on staff and gradual reductions in the use
of inpatient care. In addition, the number of dedicated
beds for TB patients fell from 103 000 in 2007 to less
than 97 000 in 2010, and the average length of stay for
a TB patient fell from 106 to 84 days. It should also be
highlighted that the characteristics of the patient population in the Russian Federation (such as high rates of
alcohol abuse and unemployment, and a comparatively
high proportion of ex-prisoners) may also warrant additional investments in some aspects of TB care. Examples
include patient enablers and incentives to support outpatient care, and psychosocial support.

4.2

Funding for TB care and control in


the 22 high-burden countries and
75 other countries

Besides the 22 HBCs, 75 other countries have reported


nancial data to WHO since 2006 that allow assessment
of trends in funding for TB control. These 97 countries
accounted for 92% of the worlds notied cases of TB in
2010.
Funding for TB control in these 97 countries has grown
from US$ 3.5 billion in 2006 to a projected US$ 4.4 billion
in 2012 (Figure 4.8, Figure 4.9); funding has levelled off

FIGURE 4.8

FIGURE 4.9

Funding available for TB control by line item and


funding gap, 22 high-burden countries and 75 other
countries,a 20062012

Funding available for TB control by source of


funding and funding gap, 22 high-burden countries and
75 other countries,a 20062012

4.7

5.0
4.6

4.3

4.2
4

General healthsystem services:


MDR-TB
General healthsystem services:
DOTS

3.8

Other
PPM/PAL/ACSM/
CBC/OR/surveys

TB/HIV
1
0

Gap
5.3

US$ billions (constant 2011 US$)

US$ billions (constant 2011 US$)

MDR-TB
DOTS
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

4.7

5.3

4.6

Global Fund
Grants (excluding
Global Fund)

4.3

4.2
4

3.8

Government, general
health-care services

Government,
NTP budget
(including loans)

2
1
0

2012

Gap
5.0

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

These countries together account for 92% of the total number of drug-susceptible TB cases notied globally in 2010.

FIGURE 4.10

Domestic funding as a percentage of total funding available to the NTP, 2011

RUSSIAN FEDERATION

CHINA

INDIA

BANGLADESH
VIET NAM
CAMBODIA
PHILIPPINES

MAURITANIA
PAKISTAN
AFGHANISTAN

CAPE
VERDE

ETHIOPIA
UGANDA
KENYA

NIGERIA
BRAZIL

EQUATORIAL
GUINEA

MYANMAR
THAILAND
INDONESIA

UR TANZANIA

GABON
DR CONGO
ANGOLA
ZIMBABWE
SOUTH AFRICA

MOZAMBIQUE

>90%
5190%
1150%
10%
No data

since 2009. As in the 22 HBCs, the largest share of funding is for TB diagnosis and treatment with rst-line drugs
(labelled DOTS in Figure 4.8); an increasing amount
is for MDR-TB. National governments account for 86%
of the funding expected in 2012, followed by the Global
Fund (US$ 515 million, or 12% of total funding) and then
by grants from donors besides the Global Fund (US$ 113
million, or 2%). International donor funding for TB control has increased by 50% since 2006, from US$ 0.4 billion to an expected US$ 0.6 billion in 2012, but still falls
far short of funding for malaria (US$ 1.8 billion in 2009)1
and HIV (US$ 6.9 billion in 2010).2

Funding gaps in the 97 countries amounted to


US$ 0.7 billion in 2011 and are anticipated to reach
US$ 0.8 billion in 2012 (Figure 4.9).
Global aggregates conceal wide variation in the share
of funding from domestic sources at country level (Figure 4.10). For example, in most countries of sub-Saha1

World malaria report 2010. Geneva, World Health Organization,


2010.
Financing the response to AIDS in low and middle-income countries.
international assistance from donor governments in 2010. UNAIDS
and the Kaiser Family Foundation, 2010. Available at www.
unaids.org

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

47

FIGURE 4.11

Cost per TB patient treated with rst-line drugs (US$), 2010

RUSSIAN FEDERATION

CHINA

INDIA
PAKISTAN
AFGHANISTAN
NIGERIA
BRAZIL

DR CONGO

ETHIOPIA
UGANDA
KENYA

MYANMAR
THAILAND
INDONESIA

UR TANZANIA

ZIMBABWE
SOUTH AFRICA

>5000
MOZAMBIQUE

10015000
5011000
101500
100
No data

FIGURE 4.12

The cost of TB control as a percentage of total health expenditures by the public sector, 2009

>7%
5.17%
3.15%
1.13%
1%
No data

48

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

BANGLADESH
VIET NAM
CAMBODIA
PHILIPPINES

ran Africa the share of funding from domestic sources


is below 50% (the exceptions are Angola, Cape Verde,
Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and South Africa all highincome or middle-income countries).
The cost of treating a patient with rst-line drugs at
country level is summarized in Figure 4.11. In most countries in the African, South-East Asia and Western Pacic
regions, the cost per patient treated is under US$ 1000
(exceptions include Botswana, Namibia and South Africa in the African Region, and Malaysia in the Western
Pacic Region). Costs are higher in the Region of the
Americas and the European Region.
In general, the cost of TB control as a proportion
of public health expenditures1 is relatively low (Figure
4.12).2 In most countries, TB control accounts for <3%
of public health expenditures. Cambodia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Lao PDR, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan stand
out as countries that have high levels of spending on TB
relative to total health expenditure. Part of the explanation is that these countries are among the list of 27 high
MDR-TB burden countries, 3 and treatment for MDR-TB
is comparatively expensive. Other reasons include continued use of models of care for all forms of TB that rely
extensively on inpatient care. For example, in Kazakhstan, 84% of smear-negative cases and 96% of smearpositive cases4 are hospitalized, with average lengths of
stay of 60 and 105 days respectively; 35% of cases of
MDR-TB are hospitalized for 180 days. In Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, more than 50% of new cases
are hospitalized, for an average of more than 50 days.
Further details for all of the 97 countries that reported
nancial data are provided in
regional and country nance
X
COUNTRY
proles that are available
online.5
1
PROFILEHIV201
burden
COUNTRTBYburde
n, high
High

Incidence (HIV

100

)
6.2 (4.68.9

44 (3652)
67 (6574)

NEW

failure
Treatment after
default
Treatment afer

654
156

98
1767

32

ent
Total retreatm
Total )15 years

10561

Total new
Total )15 years

106

Other

765

Other

312

Relapse

8954

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
n
Smear unknow
Extrapulmonary

1251

798

80

60
40
20
0
1990

11812
40

12373

20

Yes

Treatment success

75

1995 2000

1990

32

ve

Smear-positi

ive/EP

85

Smear-negat

80

Retreatment

75
70
65
60
55

2000

50

2001

2003

2005

1500

2007

ESTIMATES
MDR-TB, 2008
MDR-TB
TB cases with
% of all new
MDR-TB
TB cases with
cases
% of all ret
among notied
Cases of MDR-TB
TB
of pulmonary
MDR-TB, 2009
for MDR-TB
cases tested
Number of
tested for MDR-TB
% of notied
cases of MDR-TB
Conrmed
treatment
started on
MDR-TB patients

RETREATMENT
1548
88%

30%

324

152

318

145

0.5
0.08
4

2008

1995

1999

2001

0
2005

2003

1.1

35

82

In country
Yes

120

100

(excluding
loans)

Government,
NTP budget
(excluding
loans)

ART

2007

2008

2009

2010

99

60

DOTS,
excluding firstline drugs

MDR-TB

40

DOTS, first-line
drugs

38

30

2011

30
Gaps are relative to
country plans, as
opposed to actual
needs according to
regional or global
targets.

0
2006

88

2002

2005

61%

23%

27%
464

200

2009

2010

2011

483

General healthcare services


DOTS
OR/Surveys/
other

NTP budget

ACSM/CBC/
PPM/PAL

Available funding

TB/HIV
35

MDR-TB
DOTS

2011

2008

2008

500

General healthcare services


MDR-TB

537
484

404

54

100

94%

64%

2007

Expenditure by line item

74.1

93%

ACSM/CBC/
PPM/PAL
TB/HIV

2011

Funding available by
79.6line 88.3
item
83.2

386

1
OR/Surveys/
other

108

400

General healthcare services


MDR-TB

414

392

General healthcare services


DOTS

347
300

OR/Surveys/
other
ACSM/CBC/
PPM/PAL

200

TB/HIV
MDR-TB
DOTS

100

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2006
1

These 18 countries represent


95% of the total number
uncertain quality.
of cases notied in

the region in 2009. Data

2007

2008

were imputed when country

2009
reports were incomplete

or of

BUDGETS BY SOURCE
OF FUNDING AND TOTAL
EXPENDITURES IN SELECTED
countries; missing data
COUNTRIES (US$ MILLIONS)
were not imputed.

Data are as reported by

Australia
Cambodia
China
China (Hong Kong SAR)
China (Macao SAR)
Japan
Lao Peoples Democratic
Republic
Malaysia
Mongolia
New Zealand
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Republic of Korea
Singapore
Solomon Islands
Viet Nam

Gov. government; GF

GOV.

LOANS

GRANTS

GAP

4.8
82.7

25.6
6.9

4.0
149.0
17.0

1.6

0.3

0.2

2011

7.0
194.0
17.0

1.7
2.8

2006 2009

39.2
285.0
23.2

1.1
196.0
23.2

50.0
2.7
5.5
4.6

0.4
5.5
1.9

3.1
16.6
8.0

5.1
96.9

0.1
29.5

9.8

1.3
12.1

0.0
6.4

Global Fund. Cells are

blank when no data were

TOTAL EXPENDITURE

GF

4
5

BUDGET

TOTAL
2006 2011

7.8

0.3

2.5

0.2

5.1

0.9

reported. If a country has

1.2
4.8

10.3
225.0
22.7

0.7
12.1

10.7

0.0

0.1
9.6

3.5
0.2
20.1

new historic data to report,

57.0
2.4
2.6
2.6

67.4

it should contact tbdata@who.in

t.

Improvements to the methods used to analyse nancial data, ongoing data challenges and ways in which the
quantity and quality of nancial data can be improved
are described in Box 4.1.

Funding needs and gaps for MDR-TB


care and control

Of the estimated 290 000 cases of MDR-TB among notied cases of pulmonary TB in 2010, only around 50 000
were reported to have been enrolled on treatment (Chapter 3). China and India account for 44% of the estimated
cases (about 130 000), but reported only small numbers
of cases as enrolled on treatment (just over 4000). In
the Russian Federation, which ranks third in terms of
the estimated number of cases of MDR-TB among notied cases of pulmonary TB (about 31 000 cases), almost
14 000 patients were enrolled on treatment. In European
countries excluding the Russian Federation, there were
an estimated 22 000 people with MDR-TB among notied
cases of pulmonary TB (8% of the global total) in 2010,
just under 19 000 of which were enrolled on treatment.
Kazakhstan enrolled more cases on treatment (5705,
or 13% of the total) than any other country apart from
the Russian Federation. With 5402 patients enrolled on
treatment in 2010, South Africa ranked third.
The funding available for MDR-TB treatment in 106
countries that reported data increased from US$ 0.2
billion in 2006 to US$ 0.7 billion in 2011 (Figure 4.13).6
Second-line drugs accounted for 3050% of the total,
depending on the year. In 2011, three countries account
for most of the funding: in descending order, they are
South Africa, the Russian Federation and Kazakhstan,
with a combined total of US$ 0.5 billion.7 Much of the
remaining funding is accounted for by China (US$ 35
million) and India (US$ 47 million). Although the
amounts of funding for MDR-TB in China and India are
small relative to the other three countries, they represent
a large increase compared with amounts of US$ 0.2 million and US$ 1.9 million respectively in 2006.
Much of the reported funding for MDR-TB is from
domestic sources, but the share varies from year to year.
Since 2006, domestic nancing has represented 6094%

112

80

2009

2007

2006

FINANCING
600
(millions)
Total budget
e (million s)
Funding availabl
funded
500
% of budget
domestic sources
funding from
% available
Global Fund
funding from
400
% available
369
e funding
and availabl
NTP budget
300

2009

0.6

Global Fund
Grants
(excluding
Global Fund)
Loans
Government,
general healthcare services

20
1997

2010

600)
2400 (21002

3486

613

CPT

200

500

56 (4161)

NEW

GAPS AND EXPENDITU


RES FOR 18 COUNTRIE
S IN THE REGION1
Funding gap by line item

100

1000

13 (1117)

2007
LABORATORIES
ion)
100 000 populat
Smear (per
ion)
5 million populat
Culture (per
ion)
million populat
DST (per 10
le
DST availab
Second-line
ce Laboratory
National Referen

Western Pacic

2010)

1999

US$ millions (constant

1997

Patients

1995

US$ million

40

2015

2005 2010

4548
HIV status
TB/HIV, 2009
39%
AVAILABLE FUNDING,
with known
TB patients
FUNDING
Number of
1564
HIV status
with known
Funding available by34%
itive
% of TB patients
source
that are HIV-pos
TB patients
itive
700
Number of
64%
that are HIV-pos
CPT
TB patients
started on
% of tested
87%
TB patients
ART
HIV-positive
started
600on
% identied
95 780
TB patients
itive
HIV-pos
559
with HIV
% identied
547
34 845
of people living
500on ART
with HIV
489
Estimated number
3841
living
470
of people
452
d for TB
Estimated number
2578
people screene
HIV-positive
with IPT
d 400
Number of
people provide
HIV-positive
Number of
itive TB patients300
HIV-positive
for HIV-pos
CPT and ART

ositive

45

2015

Yes

Unknow n MDR-TB

69

, new smear-p

49%

56
New MDR-TB
MDR-TB
Retreat ment

82

2010

TB CONTROL FINANCING
Regional Proles

2010)

SUCCESS (%)
TREATMENT
ositive
New smear-p
egative/EP
New smear-n
Retreatment

2005

1995 2000

Mortality
80
60

relapse
Total new and
notied
Total cases

Percent

Prevalence

100

204

NS
nt
DRUG REGIME
out treatme
(FDCs)
used through
combinations
Rifampicin
xed-dose
treated with
% of patients
d
tions procure
Paediat ric formula

2005

2000

1995

1990

RETREATMENT

2010)

ATIONS

US$ millions (constant

CASE NOTIFIC

notifications

200

27 (2235)
16 (1419)

0)
180 (16021
)
110 (90130

in grey) and

300

US$ millions (constant

2009

250

(230260)

ion
000 populat
Rate per 100

OF BURDEN
ESTIMATES
ng HIV)
Mortalit y (excludi
(incl HIV)
Prevalence
HIV)
Incidence (incl
sitive)
Incidence (HIV-po
n (%)
Case detectio

2010)

Number

2009

(millions) 668
000 pop)
Rate (per 100
37 (3141)

US$ millions (constant

Population

4.3

Source: World Health Organization National Health Account


database (www.who.int/nha/en) accessed via http://data.
worldbank.org/indicator/SH.XPD.PUBL.ZS in July 2011.
In some countries in Africa, estimates appear to be too high
because of a denominator that is underestimated. A good
example is the Democratic Republic of the Congo; here, the
explanation may be a lack of data on expenditures by regional
governments.
For the list of 27 countries, see Chapter 2 and Chapter 3.
For case de nitions, see Chapter 3.
www.who.int/tb/data
These amounts include the estimated value of resources used
for inpatient care and outpatient visits, which are not usually
part of the budgets and expenditures reported by NTPs. They
exclude laboratory supplies and equipment, since amounts for
MDR-TB specically are not distinguished in the WHO data
collection form.
Financial data were not reported to WHO by South Africa in
2011. The funding available was estimated using data reported in previous years as well as a detailed budget developed
using the WHO TB planning and budgeting tool in 2007 (see
Box 4.1).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

49

BOX 4.1
Improved methods for data analysis and ongoing data challenges
Improved methods for data analysis
Uncertainty about estimates of total NTP budgets, available funding and expenditures was more rigorously accounted for in
the time-series presented in this chapter, compared with previous reports in this series. Missing values were estimated using a
regression model in which the budget requested for period t in a specic country was assumed to depend on a combination of the
nal budget requested for period t-1 and/or the number of TB cases in period t. One or both of these variables were included in
a stepwise regression, with forward selection based on p-values. In the absence of any signicant explanatory variables, a linear
time-trend was tted to the reported budget values and missing values were interpolated. For countries that have reported budget
data but have never reported expenditures, expenditure data reported by other countries within the same income group were
used to estimate the proportion of the required budget that was ultimately funded and spent. A full description of the methods will
be made available in a paper for a peer-reviewed journal.

Weaknesses in nancial data reported to WHO


During WHOs annual process of data collection, review and follow-up, considerable efforts are made to maintain and improve
the quality and completeness of nancial reports. Despite these efforts, expenditure data are consistently less complete than
budget data. Examples of HBCs where there have been persistent difculties with reporting expenditures include South Africa
(since 2006), Uganda (since 2005) and Thailand (since 2008). In Uganda, reasons include difculties in compiling data from four
administrative regions and 111 districts. In South Africa, it has proved difcult to compile expenditures from the nine provinces
and 44 district municipalities. Wide uncertainty bands on the estimates of expenditures in these and other countries illustrate
the need for investments in nancial management systems, especially in countries where responsibility for budget allocation and
monitoring of expenditures is decentralized to subnational levels (such as states and provinces), to ensure that TB expenditures
can be tracked at all levels.

Efforts to improve the quantity and quality of nancial data


WHO continues to promote and train countries to use the TB Planning and Budgeting tool to improve the quality of the data
being reported (and to make it easier for countries to report to WHO). By mid-2011, the tool had been used to develop plans and
budgets in 13 of the 22 HBCs and a further 28 countries. An assessment of the tool by users in 2011 will help to make further
improvements; input can be provided via WHOs Stop TB Department web site (www.who.int/tb). For some countries, specic
studies following the established methods of national health accounts may be required on a periodic basis to better track TB
expenditures.

FIGURE 4.13

Funding available for MDR-TB by line item, 106 countries,a


20062012

US$ millions (constant 2011 US$)

800

Other
Second-line drugs

600

400

200

0
2006
a

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

These countries accounted for 96% of the total number of MDR-TB cases
enrolled on treatment in 2010.

of the NTP budget; on the assumption that hospital


care and outpatient visits during treatment (typically not
included in NTP budgets) are domestically nanced, this
gure for domestic nancing increases to 7996% of the
total funding available for MDR-TB. The value of grants
for MDR-TB from the Global Fund is growing, and
reached US$ 0.13 billion in 2011 (equivalent to 91% of
total grant nancing for MDR-TB). According to country reports, the biggest grants are for India and China, at
US$ 36 million and US$ 31 million respectively.
The funding that is available for MDR-TB is much
lower than the funding requirements set out in the Global Plan 20112015.1 The estimates in the plan are that
US$ 7 billion is needed over ve years, increasing from
US$ 0.9 billion in 2011 to US$ 1.9 billion in 2015 (see
also section 2.4), for the cumulative treatment of 1.1 million people with MDR-TB, including 270 000 in 2015. To
reach the plan targets, substantial resource mobilization
will be needed. A new analysis suggests that most of the
funding required for scaling up MDR-TB diagnosis and
treatment could come from domestic funding in BRICS
and other middle-income countries (Box 4.2).
1

50

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

The Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015. Geneva, World Health


Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/STB/2010.2).

BOX 4.2
Financing the expansion of diagnosis and treatment of MDR-TB

Funding needs in the three groups of countries are illustrated in the gure (right). BRICS account for more than 60% of
the required funding in each year and almost 70% of overall
funding (US$ 4.6 billion for 20112015). Other MICs require
US$ 0.20.4 billion per year, and US$ 1.8 billion in total. The
LICs require US$ 0.10.2 billion per year, and US$ 0.7 billion
in total.
Donor funding for MDR-TB amounted to US$ 0.14 billion in
2011. If prioritized for LICs, current levels of donor funding
would be almost sufcient to nance the scale-up of MDRTB diagnosis and treatment in line with the targets included
in the Global Plan.

US$ billions (current)

In a new analysis conducted for this report, the funding needs for MDR-TB set out in the Global Plan to Stop TB 20112015 were
estimated for three groups of countries: BRICS (Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China and South Africa), other middleincome countries (MICs), and low-income countries (LICs). These groupings were dened with the rationale that BRICS as well
as other MICs should have the capacity to fund the diagnosis and treatment of MDR-TB from domestic sources, while LICs
will need nancial support from grant sources. Estimates of
funding requirements for each group were developed using Funding required for MDR-TB, Global Plan to Stop TB,
projections of the number of patients that would need to 20112015a
be treated in each country to reach the Global Plan target,
2.0
and estimates of the cost per patient treated for individual
Total
countries that underpinned the analyses conducted for the
1.5
Global Plan.
BRICSb

1.0

0.5

Other MICsc
LICsd

0
2011
a

b
c
d

2012

2013

2014

2015

Total funding required is the best estimate from the range of plausible values
reported in the Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015.
Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China and South Africa.
Other middle-income countries (not including BRICS).
Low-income countries.

It should also be highlighted that there is scope to lower the


costs of treatment. The average (median) cost per patient implied by data reported by the 27 high MDR-TB burden countries
20092011 is US$ 8200 (interquartile range, US$ 620021 700). Besides the more expensive drug regimens that are needed
for treatment, a major reason for relatively high costs (compared with those for rst-line treatments shown in Figure 4.7)
4.7 is that
people are treated for lengthy periods of time in hospital. The latest WHO guidelines on the programmatic management of MDR-TB
include a conditional recommendation for outpatient treatment, based on a systematic review of the cost and cost-effectiveness
of models of care in Estonia, Peru, the Philippines and Tomsk (Russian Federation).1,2 The outpatient models cost less than
US$ 4000 per patient.
1

4.4

Fitzpatrick C, Floyd K. A systematic review of the cost and cost-effectiveness of treatment for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.
PharmacoEconomics, 2011 [accepted for publication].
Guidelines for the programmatic management of drug-resistant tuberculosis, 2011 update. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2011.
www.who.int/tb/challenges/mdr/programmatic_guidelines_for_mdrtb

Comparisons of funding available for


TB care and control with the resource
requirements estimated in the Global
Plan to Stop TB 20112015

The Global Plan to Stop TB 20112015 was developed by


the Stop TB Partnership in 2010.1 It sets out what needs
to be done to achieve the global targets for TB control
set for 2015,2 and the associated funding requirements
(Table 4.2, Figure 4.14). The total requirement over ve
years amounts to US$ 47 billion. Excluding research and
development for new TB drugs, diagnostics and vaccines
(Chapter 7), which are not the responsibility of NTPs, the
total is US$ 37 billion. This rises from around US$ 6 billion in 2011 to US$ 8 billion in 2015 (Figure 4.14). Diagnosis and treatment following the DOTS approach requires
the largest single share of funding US$ 4 billion in 2011
increasing to around US$ 5 billion in 2015. The second

largest component is diagnosis and treatment of MDRTB, for which the funding requirement is estimated at
US$ 1 billion in 2011, rising to almost US$ 2 billion in
2015.
A comparison of the funding requirements set out
in the Global Plan with the funding available in the 149
low-income and middle-income countries considered in
the plan is provided in Figure 4.15.3 Overall, funding falls
about US$ 2 billion short of the requirements estimated
in the Global Plan in 2012. This includes a gap of about
1

2
3

The Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015. Geneva, World Health


Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/STB/2010.2).
For a summary of the targets set in the plan, see Chapter 1.
The total funding available in the 97 countries for which data
were available was adjusted upwards according to the fraction
of cases for which they accounted, to allow direct comparison
with the group of 149 countries considered in the Global Plan.
The Global Plan excludes high-income countries.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

51

FIGURE 4.14

Funding required to implement the Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015


Implementationa

DOTS
6

10

4
6
3
4

US$ billions (constant 2011 US$)

2
2

0
2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2012

2013

2014

2015

TB/HIV

Drug-resistant TB
0.8

2.5
2.0

0.6

1.5
0.4
1.0
0.2

0.5
0

0
2011

2012

2013

2014

2011

2015

Implementation includes DOTS, Drug-resistant TB, TB/HIV, Laboratory strengthening and Technical assistance.

FIGURE 4.15

Funding required according to the Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015, funding required
according to country plans and funding available for TB control, 20102012, 149 countries
Europe

Rest of the world

2.0

Required (country plans)

Required (Global

Plan)

DOTS

Available

1.5

US$ billions (current)

uire

Req

Required (country plans)


1.0

ired

Requ

Available

n)
al Pla

(Glob

MDR-TB

0.5

Required (country plans)


Available
0

Required (country plans)

bal

Glo
ed (

uir

Req

Available

Plan

0
2010

52

n)

l Pla

ba
(Glo

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

TABLE 4.2

Summary of funding requirements for TB control


during the period 20112015, as set out in the Global
Plan to Stop TB
TOTAL FUNDING REQUIRED
(US$ BILLIONS) [% OF TOTAL]

PLAUSIBLE
RANGE

Implementation

36.9 [79%]

36.137.7

DOTS

22.6 [48%]

22.123.2

PLAN COMPONENT

MDR-TB

7.1 [15%]

6.67.7

TB/HIV

2.8 [6%]

2.72.9

Laboratory strengthening

4.0 [8%]

3.74.2

Technical assistance

0.4 [1%]

Research and development

9.8 [21%]

Fundamental research

2.1 [5%]

New diagnostics

1.7 [4%]

New drugs

3.7 [8%]

New vaccines

1.9 [4%]

Operational research

0.4 [1%]

All components

46.7 [100%]

US$ 1 billion for treatment with rst-line drugs (labelled


DOTS in Figure 4.15) in countries outside Europe, and
US$ 0.5 billion for treatment of patients with MDR-TB
in eastern Europe. These gaps reect the funding gaps
reported by countries (as reported in section 4.1 and section 4.2), but also planning for the implementation of TB
control that is less ambitious than the targets set out in
the Global Plan (especially the targets set for MDR-TB,
as discussed in Chapter 3). It should be emphasized that
although funding for MDR-TB appears to exceed the
funding required in the group of countries outside eastern Europe (labelled rest of the world in Figure 4.15),
this funding is heavily concentrated in one country:
South Africa.

not estimated

45.947.5

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

53

CHAPTER 5

New diagnostics and laboratory


strengthening for TB
KEY MESSAGES
 The landscape of TB diagnostics is rapidly evolving and
WHO has established a dynamic and systematic process
for timely formulation of policy. Between July 2010 and
July 2011, this process resulted in the endorsement of a
new test for rapid diagnosis of TB and drug-resistant TB
Xpert MTB/RIF as well as a negative policy on the use of
commercial serodiagnostics for the diagnosis of active TB.
 The Xpert MTB/RIF assay provides the foundation for a
revolution in the diagnosis of TB and drug-resistant TB.
 Global roll-out of the Xpert MTB/RIF assay and
associated GeneXpert instruments has started. By 30
June 2011, 26 of the 145 countries that are eligible to
purchase instruments and Xpert MTB/RIF cartridges at
concessional prices had done so.
 Conventional laboratory capacity remains inadequate
in many countries. In 2010, 8 of the 22 high-burden
countries (HBCs) that account for 80% of the worlds TB
cases did not meet the target of 1 microscopy centre per
100 000 population. Among the 36 countries that are in
the combined list of 22 HBCs and 27 high MDR-TB burden
countries, 20 had less than the recommended capacity
of 1 laboratory to perform culture and drug susceptibility
testing per 5 million population.
 Implementation of diagnostics endorsed between 2007
and 2009 appears to be most advanced in the European
Region, where 51% of countries reported using liquid
culture and rapid speciation and 43% reported use of line
probe assays.
 Laboratory strengthening must be accelerated to reach
global targets for the diagnosis of drug-resistant TB and
HIV-associated TB, as is currently happening in countries
that are participating in the EXPAND-TB project.

There were an estimated 8.8 million new and recurrent


cases of TB in 2010, of which 5.7 million were diagnosed
and notied to national TB control programmes (NTPs);
among notied cases, there were an estimated 290 000
cases of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB), of which
only 53 000 (18%) were reported to have been diagnosed
and enrolled on appropriate treatment (Chapter 2, Chapter 3). Earlier and improved detection of TB cases and
expanded capacity to diagnose cases of MDR-TB are thus
global priorities for TB control, requiring new diagnostic
tests, clear policies on which diagnostic tests to use (and
which not to use) and strengthened laboratories in which
tests can be safely and effectively carried out.
This chapter has two main parts. The rst part highlights two landmarks in TB diagnostics in 2010/2011:
the endorsement of a new rapid test for TB and drugresistant TB called Xpert MTB/RIF at the end of 2010,
and new policy guidance on the use of commercial serological tests for the diagnosis of active TB disease. The
second part discusses the status of laboratory capacity in
2010, and recent progress in strengthening laboratories
including the adoption of policy guidance from WHO.
Particular attention is given to the countries that carry
the highest burden of TB and MDR-TB as well as to a
project in 27 countries called EXPAND-TB and the rollout of Xpert MTB/RIF in the rst six months of 2011.

5.1

1
2

54

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

New diagnostic tests and WHO policies

The landscape of TB diagnostics is rapidly evolving, and


in this context WHO has established a dynamic and systematic process for timely formulation of policy. The process involves four main steps. First, the available evidence
is synthesized through systematic reviews and meta-analyses of data. Second, ndings are reviewed by an external Expert Group. Third, the evidence and public health
impact of new tools and technologies are assessed using
the recommended GRADE approach.1 Fourth, detailed
policy guidance is developed, followed by dissemination
to Member States and other stakeholders.2
Between July 2010 and July 2011, this process resulted
in the endorsement of a new test for rapid diagnosis of
TB and drug-resistant TB Xpert MTB/RIF as well as a

www.gradeworkinggroup.org
WHO policies on TB diagnostics are available at: www.who.
int/tb/laboratory/policy_statements

BOX 5.1
Serodiagnostics: the evidence base for negative policy guidance
In 2010, a systematic review identied 67 studies on the use of commercially available serodiagnostic
tests to diagnose active pulmonary TB disease. There were 32 studies from low-income and middleincome countries. The results demonstrated that the sensitivity and specicity values from individual
studies were highly variable. Pooled results of the most widely used test showed sensitivities of 76%
and 59% and specicities of 92% and 91% in patients with smear-positive and smear-negative pulmonary TB, respectively.
For extrapulmonary TB, 25 studies were identied in a systematic review, including 10 studies from
low-income and middle-income countries. The results demonstrated that sensitivity and specicity
values from individual studies were highly variable. Pooled sensitivity was 64% for TB of the lymph
nodes and 46% for TB of the pleura. The pooled results for the sensitivity and specicity of the most
widely used test were 81% and 85%, respectively. In one study involving HIV-infected patients, the
sensitivity of the test was 33%.

negative policy on the use of commercial serodiagnostics


for the diagnosis of active TB disease.

5.1.1 Xpert MTB/RIF


Xpert MTB/RIF is a TB-specic automated, cartridgebased nucleic amplication assay based on the GeneXpert multi-disease platform. It was developed by Cepheid,
Inc. (Sunnyvale, USA) in partnership with the Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND) and the
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
(Newark, USA) with support from the US National Institutes of Health and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Xpert MTB/RIF detects Mycobacterium tuberculosis as well
as mutations conferring resistance to rifampicin directly
from sputum in an assay that provides results within 100
minutes. Results from eld demonstration studies found
that a single Xpert MTB/RIF test can detect TB in 99%
of patients with smear-positive pulmonary TB and >80%
of patients with smear-negative pulmonary TB (see Chapter 3, Box 3.1 for de nitions of different types of TB case).
The demonstration studies also showed that while HIV
coinfection substantially decreases the sensitivity of
microscopy, it does not signicantly affect the performance of Xpert MTB/RIF. Furthermore, Xpert MTB/
RIF can detect rifampicin resistance with 95.1% sensitivity and exclude resistance with 98.4% specicity.
WHO endorsed the Xpert MTB/RIF assay in December 2010. The test has the capacity to revolutionize the
diagnosis of TB and drug-resistant TB, since it can greatly increase case nding and overcomes several of the barriers to establishing diagnostic capacity at country level,
including human resource and biosafety constraints.
It should be emphasized that countries will continue
to require adequate laboratory services for microscopy
and culture to monitor treatment progress and to detect
resistance to drugs other than rifampicin. Moreover, several operational conditions need to be met for successful implementation of Xpert MTB/RIF, including revised
diagnostic algorithms, de nition of the risk groups and

levels of the health system in which the test would be


used rst, and analysis of logistic considerations to optimize the use and benets of the technology.
The use of technologies such as Xpert MTB/RIF must
be accompanied by rapid expansion and access to treatment services. WHO therefore recommends that health
authorities should roll out Xpert MTB/RIF in phases,
within the context of national plans for appropriate treatment and care of TB, MDR-TB and HIV-associated TB.
Global recommendations on the operational aspects of
implementing Xpert MTB/RIF are available in key WHO
documents on a dedicated web site.1

5.1.2 Commercial serological antibody tests to


diagnose TB disease
Dozens of commercial serological antibody tests for the
diagnosis of active TB disease are marketed in many parts
of the world,2 despite the previously reported poor performance of these tests. In 2010, WHO commissioned a
systematic review to synthesize the latest evidence on the
diagnostic accuracy of these tests, both for pulmonary
and extrapulmonary TB. Overall it was found that commercial serological tests provide inconsistent and imprecise results with highly variable values for sensitivity and
specicity, and high proportions of false-negative and
false-positive results. There was no evidence that existing commercial serological assays improve outcomes
that are important to patients. Following the ndings of
this review, WHO issued negative policy guidance that
strongly recommends that commercial serological tests
should not be used for the diagnosis of pulmonary and
extrapulmonary TB. A summary of the main evidence
used for policy formulation is provided in Box 5.1; the full
policy document is available from WHO.3
1
2

www.who.int/tb/laboratory/mtbrifrollout
These tests should be distinguished from interferon-gamma
release assays (IGRAs) which are used to test for latent infection (as opposed to active disease).
www.who.int/tb/laboratory/policy_statements

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

55

Laboratory capacity and progress


in laboratory strengthening at
country level

A total of 36 countries (see Table 5.1 and Table 5.2) are in


the combined list of 22 high-burden countries (HBCs)
that account for about 80% of the worlds estimated cases
of TB and the 27 high MDR-TB burden countries that
account for about 85% of the worlds estimated cases
of MDR-TB. In 2010, 20 of these 36 countries had less
than the recommended capacity of 1 laboratory to perform culture and drug susceptibility testing (DST) per
5 million population (Table 5.1). Capacity to perform
sputum smear microscopy also remains insufcient in
many settings: 8 of the 22 HBCs do not meet the target of 1 microscopy centre per 100 000 population and
at the regional level the Western Pacic and the Eastern
Mediterranean regions had only 0.5 and 0.9 microscopy
centres, respectively, per 100 000 population.
Globally, almost three quarters of countries indicated
the existence of a designated national TB reference laboratory (NRL). The African Region reported the highest
proportion of countries (87%) with an NRL, although
their functionality and/or performance have not been
fully veried.
The Global Plan to Stop TB 201120151 includes a
target that all patients who have been previously treated
for TB should be tested for MDR-TB using rapid tests by
2015. Given the slower, conventional methods for DST,
globally only 6% of previously treated patients received
DST by any method in 2010 (see Chapter 3).
The uptake at country level of WHO laboratory policy
guidance, with particular attention to the rapid diagnosis
of drug-resistant TB, is described in Table 5.2. Capacity to conduct conventional DST for the detection of
drug resistance exists in about 50% of countries. The
uptake of newer diagnostics is slower: only 38% of countries reported use of liquid culture and rapid speciation
in 2010, and only 23% reported use of line probe assays
(LPAs) to detect rifampicin resistance. At the regional
level, implementation appears to be most advanced in the
European Region, where 51% of countries reported using
liquid culture and rapid speciation and 43% reported use
of LPAs. Uptake in the Region of the Americas appears
slowest; only 23% of countries reported using liquid culture and rapid speciation, and 2% reported use of LPAs.
The availability of conventional DST and the uptake of
new, rapid technologies in the combined list of 36 highburden countries is better than the global average. Conventional DST is being rolled out in almost all of these
countries. However, the coverage of liquid culture is still
not adequate: 15 of the 22 HBCs (68%) and 17 of the 27
high MDR-TB burden countries (63%) had implemented

FIGURE 5.1

The EXPAND-TB project - progress by July 2011


Laboratory
assessment
Laboratory
assessment
Memorandum of
understanding
Infrastructure
upgrade
Creation of SOPs
policy reform

1824 months
Bangladesh
Belarus
Indonesia
Kazakhstan
Peru
Senegal
Viet Nam

56

The Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015. Geneva, World Health


Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/STB/2010.2).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Routine testing
and monitoring

Equipment
and supplies
Procurement
Training
Quality assurance
Laboratory
validation

612 months
Azerbaijan
Cameroon
Cte dIvoire
Djibouti
Georgia
Haiti
Kenya
Kyrgyzstan
Republic of
Moldova
Swaziland
Tajikistan
UR Tanzania

Monitoring
and evaluation
Impact
assessment
Market
dynamics

Up to year 5
Ethiopia
India
Lesotho
Myanmar
Uganda
Uzbekistan

FIGURE 5.2

Cases of MDR-TB reported by selected countries


participating in the EXPAND-TB project, 20082010
3000

India
2967

2500
2000

1660

1500
1023

1000

Uzbekistan

654
500

Technology
transfer

liquid culture by 2010; the gures were 10/22 (45%) and


16/27 (59%), respectively, for LPAs. The slightly higher
rate of implementation among HBCs is due in part to
the EXPAND-TB project, a multi-partner initiative to
establish new and rapid TB diagnostic technologies in 27
countries.
Launched in 2008 and expected to continue until 2013,
the EXPAND-TB project aims to improve capacity to
diagnose MDR-TB in upgraded laboratory services in 27
countries, 15 of which are in the list of 22 HBCs or 27
high MDR-TB burden countries (Figure 5.1). The project
is a collaboration among WHO, the Global Laboratory
Initiative, FIND and the Global Drug Facility, and funded
by UNITAID and other partners. As this report went to
press, new laboratory infrastructure and successful transfer of liquid culture and LPA technologies had been established in 18 countries. Among these 18 countries, six were
routinely diagnosing patients with MDR-TB and rapid
increases in patient numbers were evident (Figure 5.2).

Number of cases

5.2

342
308
26
2008

57
2009

93
2010

Uganda

TABLE 5.1

Laboratory capacity, 2010

SMEAR
LABORATORIES
(PER 100 000
POPULATION)

CULTURE
LABORATORIES
(PER 5 MILLION
POPULATION)a

DRUG
SUSCEPTIBILITY
TESTING
LABORATORIES
(PER 5 MILLION
POPULATION)a

LINE-PROBE
ASSAY RIFAMPICIN
LABORATORIES
(PER 5 MILLION
POPULATION)

NATIONAL
REFERENCE
LABORATORY

HIGH TB
BURDEN

HIGH
MDR-TB
BURDEN

Afghanistan

1.9

0.2

Armenia

1.4

1.6

1.6

1.6

Azerbaijan

0.8

1.1

1.1

Bangladesh

0.7

<0.1

<0.1

Belarus

Brazil

2.0

6.5

1.0

Bulgaria

0.5

Cambodia

1.5

1.1

China

0.2

DR Congo

Estonia

Ethiopia
Georgia

 Yes

 No

0.7

0.4

3.3

0.7

<0.1

2.2

<0.1

<0.1

0.4

7.5

7.5

7.5

2.3

0.1

0.1

0.1

0.7

2.3

1.1

1.1

India

1.1

<0.1

<0.1

<0.1

Indonesia

2.1

0.9

0.1

Kazakhstan

2.9

6.9

Kenya

3.3

0.7

0.5

0.4

Kyrgyzstan

2.3

7.5

2.8

0.9

Latvia

0.7

8.9

2.2

2.2

Lithuania

0.4

9.0

9.0

1.5

Mozambique

1.9

0.4

0.4

Myanmar

0.9

0.2

0.2

0.2

Nigeria

0.6

0.2

0.1

<0.1

Pakistan

0.7

0.4

0.3

Philippines

2.1

0.4

0.1

Republic of Moldova

1.7

5.6

5.6

1.4

Russian Federation

2.8

9.5

South Africa

0.5

1.5

1.5

1.4

Tajikistan

1.4

2.2

0.7

Thailand

1.6

4.7

1.1

0.1

Uganda

2.9

1.2

0.6

0.5

Ukraine

2.2

5.1

UR Tanzania

1.6

0.4

0.2

0.2

Uzbekistan

1.1

0.7

0.4

0.4

Viet Nam

0.9

1.3

0.1

0.1

Zimbabwe

20

31

14

11

14

0.9

0.8

0.8

High-burden countries

1.0

2.0

0.7

<0.1

95%

High MDR-TB burden countries

0.9

2.1

0.8

<0.1

85%

AFR

1.4

0.7

0.4

0.2

87%

AMR

2.5

0.9

<0.1

74%

EMR

0.9

77%

EUR

1.3

SEAR

1.2

17
2.0
12
0.4

0.4

0.1

5.9

1.1

62%

0.1

<0.1

82%

WPR

0.5

4.6

0.7

0.1

72%

Global

1.1

4.4

1.0

0.1

74%

Indicates no data reported.


a
The revised WHO target for both culture and DST capacity is 1 laboratory per 5 million population. While these processes previously had separate indicators, the
revised combined indicator is the result of the introduction of new technologies for which culture and DST are invariably performed together.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

57

TABLE 5.2

Implementation of WHO policy guidance for diagnosis of TB, 2010


 Yes

CONVENTIONAL DRUG
SUSCEPTIBILITY TESTING (DST)

LINE-PROBE ASSAY FOR DETECTING


RESISTANCE TO RIFAMPICIN

ALGORITHM FOR THE DIAGNOSIS


OF TB IN HIV-POSITIVE PEOPLE

HIGH TB
BURDEN

INCORPORATED
INTO POLICY

BEING
ROLLED OUT

INCORPORATED
INTO POLICY

BEING
ROLLED OUT

INCORPORATED
INTO POLICY

BEING
ROLLED OUT

INCORPORATED
INTO POLICY

BEING
ROLLED OUT

Afghanistan

Armenia

Azerbaijan

Bangladesh

Belarus

Brazil

Bulgaria

Cambodia

China

DR Congo

Estonia

Ethiopia

Georgia

India

Indonesia

Kazakhstan

Kenya

Kyrgyzstan

Latvia

Lithuania

Mozambique

Myanmar

Nigeria

Pakistan

Philippines

Republic of Moldova

Russian Federation

South Africa

Tajikistan

Thailand

Uganda

Ukraine

UR Tanzania

Uzbekistan

Viet Nam

Zimbabwe

High-burden countries

91%

91%

64%

68%

45%

45%

77%

73%

High MDR-TB burden countries

93%

85%

67%

63%

52%

59%

70%

59%

AFR

52%

48%

48%

46%

33%

24%

57%

54%

AMR

40%

34%

32%

23%

4%

2%

34%

30%

 No

EMR

68%

55%

45%

36%

32%

18%

59%

59%

EUR

60%

57%

51%

51%

42%

43%

38%

34%

SEAR

82%

64%

45%

36%

27%

27%

36%

36%

WPR

50%

50%

31%

31%

22%

22%

42%

50%

Global

54%

49%

42%

38%

27%

23%

44%

43%

Indicates no data reported.

58

LIQUID CULTURE AND RAPID


SPECIATION TEST

HIGH
MDR-TB
BURDEN

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

FIGURE 5.3

Progress in the roll-out of Xpert MTB/RIF, as of June 2011

KYRGYSTAN (4)
TAJIKISTAN (8)

AZERBAIJAN (4)
GEORGIA (8)

CHINA (16)
NEPAL (4)
CAMBODIA (16)
PHILIPPINES (4)
PAKISTAN (4)
INDIA (14)

GUATEMALA (4)
HAITI (4)

ETHIOPIA (8)
UGANDA (26)
BRAZIL (4)

PERU (8)

KENYA (32)
TANZANIA (36)

MALAWI (12)
ZAMBIA (14)
ZIMBABWE (24)
BOTSWANA (4)
SOUTH AFRICA (361)

GeneXpert
modules ordered
0
14

MOZAMBIQUE (12)
SWAZILAND (20)
LESOTHO (4)

514
1529
30
Not eligible for
preferential pricing
No data

As the newly endorsed Xpert MTB/RIF assay is rolled


out worldwide, WHO is systematically compiling and
sharing information on progress, including the plans of
countries and partners, information on sales of instrument modules1 and cartridges and reports of problems
from the eld. Of the 145 countries that are eligible to
purchase GeneXpert instrument modules and Xpert
MTB/RIF cartridges at concessional prices agreed
between FIND and the manufacturer,2 26 countries had
ordered a total of 681 instrument modules by 30 June
2011 (Figure 5.3); 361 were ordered by South Africa alone.
In addition to equipping laboratories with new diagnostic technologies, implementation of external quality
assurance (EQA) systems is critical to ensure the highquality functioning of laboratories. Of the 36 countries
in the combined list of 22 HBCs and 27 high MDR-TB
burden countries, 29 provided information on the num-

ber of microscopy centres that participated in an EQA


scheme in 2010. Coverage was far from adequate, with
*80% of microscopy centres participating in an EQA
scheme in only 21 of the 29 countries. Similarly, of the
30 countries that provided information on the number
of DST laboratories that participated in an EQA scheme,
only 20 reported that all DST laboratories participated in
2010. More positively, all of the 36 countries that reported less than 100% participation in EQA schemes in 2010
had plans to increase the coverage of their EQA schemes
for both microscopy and DST in 2011.
In addition to advancing policies and initiatives to
accelerate the uptake of new, rapid diagnostics, two priority themes to strengthen laboratories in 2011 are promoting laboratory accreditation and laboratory biosafety
(Box 5.2).3

The most common conguration is a four-module instrument, which allows for 1620 tests per day.
The list of eligible countries is available at
www. nddiagnostics.org/about/what_we_do/successes/
nd-negotiated-prices/xpert_mtb_rif.html
For the most up-to-date WHO policies and resources on TB
diagnostics and laboratory strengthening, visit www.who.
int/tb/laboratory/policy_statements. Resources of the GLI,
a Working Group of the Stop TB Partnership, are available at
www.stoptb.org/wg/gli

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

59

BOX 5.2
Priority themes for strengthening laboratories in 2011: accreditation and biosafety
Accreditation. The Global Plan to Stop TB 20112015 includes a target that more than half of all national TB reference laboratories (NRLs) should have implemented an accredited quality management system by 2015. Accreditation programmes for laboratories provide both guidance and an incentive for improving laboratory quality. While such programmes are required components of
TB laboratory services in most industrialized countries, they have been largely absent in resource-constrained settings.
International standards (so-called ISO standards) for clinical laboratory services have been developed by the International Organization for Standardization. However, because of the specic technical nature of TB diagnostic services and the corresponding
biosafety needs, these general standards need to be translated into practical guidelines and TB-specic requirements. Partners
of the Global Laboratory Initiative (GLI), including the Union, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the
Royal Tropical Institute in the Netherlands and WHO have developed a guide to assist countries to implement a quality management system at the level of the NRL. This guide facilitates a step-wise approach to achieving relevant ISO standards, and will be
eld tested in countries starting in 2011.
Biosafety. A combination of good laboratory practices together with administrative controls, containment principles, safety
equipment and laboratory facilities are essential in TB laboratories to minimize the generation of infectious aerosols and thus prevent laboratory-acquired infections. Different types and combinations of test procedures require different containment precautions, equipment and facilities. WHO has therefore developed a risk assessment approach to determine the minimum biosafety
measures required for TB laboratories based on the actual procedures performed in the laboratory. It is important to note that the
risk-based approach to laboratory biosafety moves away from the traditional approach of assigning different biosafety levels to
a much more focused approach taking into account the actual procedures performed in the laboratory.
The resulting three-tiered system is based on low, moderate and high TB risk precautions, described below; respective
minimum requirements are described in detail in biosafety guidance under development in 2011.
Low TB risk precautions. Procedures: direct AFB microscopy, Xpert MTB-RIF
Moderate TB risk precautions. Procedures: processing sputum specimens for primary culture inoculation on solid media, direct
nitrate reductase assay (NRA), direct microscopic observation of drug susceptibility (MODS) assay or direct line-probe assay on
sputum-positive specimens
High TB risk precautions containment laboratory. Procedures: manipulating cultures for identication and drug susceptibility
testing (DST) with indirect phenotypic methods such as liquid culture, or for line probe assays

60

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

CHAPTER 6

Addressing the co-epidemics of TB and HIV

KEY MESSAGES
 HIV testing of TB patients is now standard practice in
many countries, especially in the African Region. In 68
countries and territories including 22 countries in the
African Region, 75% of TB patients knew their HIV status
in 2010. Further efforts are needed to achieve similar
results at global level. In 2010, 34% of notied TB patients
(2.1/6.2 million) knew their HIV status.
 The highest rates of HIV coinfection in TB patients are
in the African Region, where 44% of TB patients with an
HIV test result in 2010 were HIV-positive (range among
high TB/HIV burden countries, 8%82%), followed by the
Region of the Americas (17%).
 The global coverage of antiretroviral therapy (ART) for
TB patients living with HIV remains low (only 46%), despite
the large increase in HIV testing among TB patients and
the WHO recommendation that ART should be provided to
all TB patients living with HIV regardless of their CD4 cell
count. The provision of ART to TB patients living with HIV
must be enhanced, including the use of TB services and
infrastructure to allow decentralization of care delivery
according to national guidelines and the local context.
 Implementation of WHO guidelines on TB screening
and isoniazid preventive therapy among people living
with HIV can result in a rapid expansion of TB prevention,
diagnosis and treatment.
 The recording and reporting of the outcomes of TB
treatment disaggregated by HIV status needs to be
improved, using WHO-recommended TB registers (which
should also be used by HIV service providers including in
ART clinics).

People living with HIV who are also infected with TB


are about 2134 times more likely to develop TB disease
compared with those who are HIV-negative.1 Starting in
the 1980s, the HIV epidemic led to a major upsurge in TB
cases and TB mortality in many countries that persisted
throughout the 1990s and up to around 2004, especially
in southern and east Africa (Chapter 2, Chapter 3). Globally, just over one in ten of the almost 9 million people
who develop TB each year is HIV-positive, equivalent
to 1.1 million new TB cases among people living with
HIV in 2010 (Chapter 2, Table 2.1). In the African Region,
which accounted for 82% of the new TB cases that were
living with HIV in 2010, an estimated 900 000 (39%) of
the 2.3 million people who developed TB in 2010 were
HIV-positive. Globally in 2010, there were an estimated
0.35 million deaths (range, 0.32 million0.39 million)
from TB among people who were HIV-positive. WHO,
UNAIDS and the Stop TB Partnership have set a target
that by 2015, TB mortality rates among people who are
HIV-positive should be reduced by 50%, compared with
2004 (the year in which TB mortality among HIV-positive people is estimated to have peaked).2
WHO has provided clear recommendations about the
interventions needed to prevent, diagnose and treat TB in
people living with HIV since 2004.3 The recommended
interventions are collectively known as collaborative TB/
HIV activities. They include HIV testing of TB patients,
provision of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and co-trimoxazole preventive therapy (CPT) to TB patients living with
HIV, HIV prevention services for TB patients, intensied
TB case- nding among people living with HIV, isoniazid
preventive therapy (IPT) for people living with HIV who
do not have active TB, and infection control in health1

The probability of developing TB among people living with


HIV divided by the probability of developing TB among HIVnegative people is the incidence rate ratio (IRR). The median
value of the IRR in countries with a generalized HIV epidemic
was 21 (inter-quartile range 1425) in 2010. A generalized epidemic is de ned by UNAIDS as a prevalence of HIV infection
>1% in those aged 1549 years old. The IRR was 34 (interquartile range 2034) in 115 other countries with low-level or
concentrated HIV epidemics.
Getting to zero. 20112015 strategy. Geneva, Joint United
Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS.
Policy on collaborative TB/HIV activities. Geneva, World Health
Organization, 2004 (WHO/HTM/TB/2004.330; WHO/
HTM/HIV/2004.1).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

61

TABLE 6.1

HIV testing, treatment for HIV-positive TB patients and prevention of TB among people living with HIV, 41 high TB/HIV
burden countries and WHO regions, 2010. Numbers in thousands except where indicated
HIV-POSTIVE INCIDENT TB CASES

BEST

HIGH

% OF
NOTIFIED TB
PATIENTS
TESTED FOR
HIV

% OF TESTED
TB PATIENTS
HIVPOSITIVE

% OF
IDENTIFIED
HIVPOSITIVE TB
PATIENTS
STARTED ON
CPT

% OF
IDENTIFIED
HIVPOSITIVE TB
PATIENTS
STARTED ON
ART

NUMBER
OF HIVPOSITIVE
PEOPLE
SCREENED
FOR TB

NUMBER
OF HIVPOSITIVE
PEOPLE
PROVIDED
WITH IPT

Angola

5.2

3.7

7.1

2.4

4.9

28

18

12

Botswana

6.5

5.8

7.3

6.1

80

65

79

45

0.2

0.7

Brazil

18

15

22

37

45

23

93

Burkina Faso

1.6

1.4

1.9

4.3

83

18

96

41

Burundi

2.5

2.2

2.8

5.5

71

23

95

40

Cambodia

4.0

3.4

4.7

32

77

6.6

65

45

0.5

Cameroon

14

11

17

19

78

40

Central African Republic

5.3

4.0

6.8

2.6

39

33

62

Chad

9.2

6.4

12

3.8

39

17

China

18

10

28

150

16

3.1

45

65

Congo

1.2

1.0

1.4

9.7

94

7.8

2.9

2.9

0.1

Cte dIvoire

6.7

5.7

7.6

17

73

24

80

26

31

Djibouti

0.6

0.5

0.8

2.2

52

11

11

18

13

24

29

24

18

24

9.3

3.9

6.6

DR Congo
Ethiopia

67

43

15

69

39

44

Ghana

4.9

4.3

5.6

10

69

23

86

20

57

Haiti

4.6

3.8

5.5

9.5

67

20

13

9.8

6.2

4.1

India

110

75

160

480

32

8.6

90

57

200

Indonesia

18

9.9

29

3.2

Kenya

50

45

55

97

91

41

100

48

Lesotho

11

9.2

12

11

84

77

96

27

Malawi

21

19

22

20

88

63

94

46

230

Mali

1.5

1.0

2.0

2.3

43

17

100

40

25

Mozambique

77

53

110

41

88

61

97

25

0.4

8.9
0.5

Myanmar

37

21

57

4.4

3.2

22

100

94

6.4

Namibia

7.6

7.1

8.1

9.5

76

55

92

42

25

14

Nigeria

51

25

87

72

79

25

59

33

57

1.8

Russian Federation

8.1

6.8

9.4

170

100

6.2

82

Rwanda

3.6

3.2

4.0

6.9

98

32

97

13

Sierra Leone

4.0

3.3

4.8

9.7

74

10

6.4

19

South Africa

300

240

350

210

53

60

74

54

760

120

Sudan

7.1

4.8

9.9

11

41

6.2

58

54

1.5

Swaziland

13

10

15

9.5

86

82

93

35

Thailand

15

13

18

53

77

16

71

53

25

Togo

5.4

4.3

6.5

2.3

78

20

Uganda

38

30

46

37

81

54

90

24

400

Ukraine

6.0

5.0

7.1

35

95

13

5.0

UR Tanzania

30

28

32

57

90

38

92

35

320

Viet Nam

7.6

4.6

11

42

43

8.3

62

43

1.3

Zambia

40

36

44

41

83

65

77

47

12

Zimbabwe

60

47

76

38

80

75

18

30

1 000

960

1 100

1 900

39

25

77

46

2 300

170

AFR

900

820

980

880

59

44

76

42

2 000

160

AMR

35

31

38

100

46

17

47

65

15

13

EMR

12

9.8

15

46

11

3.4

51

37

6.8

0.3

EUR

20

19

22

290

80

6.0

48

77

5.6

6.6

SEAR

190

140

230

540

23

9.5

87

57

230

0.6

WPR

35

26

45

250

19

4.8

55

41

69

2.0

1 100

1 000

1 200

2 100

34

23

77

46

2 300

180

High TB/HIV burden countries

Global

62

LOW

NUMBER OF
TB PATIENTS
WITH
KNOWN HIV
STATUS

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

6.1

HIV testing, co-trimoxazole preventive


therapy and antiretroviral therapy for
patients with TB

The number of TB patients who knew their HIV status


reached 2.1 million in 2010, equivalent to 34% of notied cases of TB (Table 6.1). This was an improvement
from 28% in 2009 and almost 10 times better than the
3.7% reported in 2003 (Figure 6.1). The coverage of HIV
testing for TB patients was particularly high in the African and European regions, where 59% and 80% of TB
patients respectively knew their HIV status. Impressively,
*75% of TB patients living in almost half of the countries
in the African Region (22 out of 46 countries) knew their
HIV status in 2010. This was an increase from 16 in 2009
and double the 11 countries that achieved testing rates of
*75% in 2008. More than three quarters of the African
countries that reported data (31/41) achieved *50% (Figure 6.2). Five African countries did not report data for
2010: Algeria, Cape Verde, Comoros, Eritrea and Gabon.
Globally, the percentage of TB patients who knew their
HIV status was *75% in 68 countries and territories in
2010, up from 55 countries in 2009.
Among TB patients with an HIV test result in 2010,
23% were HIV-positive at the global level (Table 6.1).
Among the 41 countries identied as priorities for TB/
HIV at the global level in 2002 (listed in Table 6.1), 25%
were HIV-positive. Much higher rates of HIV coinfection were reported for TB patients in the African Region,

FIGURE 6.1

HIV testing for TB patients, all countries, 20032010


The number of notied new and retreatment cases is shown
in blue and the number of cases for which the HIV status was
recorded in the TB register is shown in green. The percentage
of notied TB cases with known HIV status is indicated
above the green bars.a
7
6
5
Cases (millions)

care and congregate settings (the latter three activities


are referred to as the Three Is for HIV/TB).
Testing TB patients for HIV and providing CPT to TB
patients living with HIV are typically the responsibility of
national TB control programmes (NTPs). National HIV
programmes are usually responsible for initiating intensied case- nding for TB among people living with HIV
as well as providing IPT to those without active TB. Provision of ART to TB patients living with HIV has often
been the responsibility of national HIV programmes,
but should also be done by NTPs. When NTPs do not
provide ART directly, they are responsible for referring
TB patients living with HIV to ART services. The latest policy guidance from WHO recommends that ART
should be provided to all TB patients living with HIV,
irrespective of their CD4 count (and to all people living
with HIV with a CD4 cell count )350).1
WHO began monitoring the implementation and
expansion of collaborative TB/HIV activities in 2004.
This chapter presents the latest status of progress, using
data for 2003 up to 2010.2 The need for better data on
treatment outcomes for TB patients living with HIV, and
the recent and rapid expansion of TB screening among
people living with HIV and associated uptake of IPT
following new policy guidance in Cambodia and South
Africa are also highlighted.

4
3
34%

28%

1
3.7%

3.1%

2003
116
(42%)

2004
101
(48%)

8.3%

20%

22%

2007
175
(98%)

2008
173
(98%)

12%

2005
139
(76%)

2006
159
(88%)

2009
186
(99%)

2010
169
(97%)

The numbers under each year show the number of countries reporting data
on HIV testing followed by the percentage of total estimated HIV-positive TB
cases accounted for by reporting countries.

where 44% of those tested were found to be HIV-positive. The percentage of TB patients found to be HIVpositive in the 31 African countries in the list of 41
priority countries ranged from 8% in Congo to 82% in
Swaziland. Besides Swaziland, more than half of the TB
patients who were tested were HIV-positive in Botswana,
Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa,
Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
In the Region of the Americas, the percentage of TB
patients found to be HIV-positive was 17%. In the Eastern Mediterranean, European, South-East Asia and
Western Pacic regions, less than 10% of TB patients
tested for HIV were HIV-positive. Among the 11 countries identied as priorities for TB/HIV at the global level
in 2002 that are outside the African Region, the percentage of TB patients who were HIV-positive ranged from
3% in China to 23% in Brazil in 2010.
Globally, the number of TB patients living with HIV
who were enrolled on CPT levelled off between 2009
and 2010, at just over 0.3 million (Figure 6.3). This was
equivalent to 77% of TB patients known to be HIV-positive (Table 6.1, Figure 6.4). Further progress is needed to
reach the target of 100% that is included in the Global
Plan to Stop TB, 201120153 (see Chapter 1). The African

1
2

www.who.int/hiv/pub/arv/advice
This chapter does not discuss infection control or services
aimed at HIV prevention among TB patients. Data for the
former are limited for most countries, but available data can
be accessed at www.who.int/tb/data. Data on HIV prevention
services for TB patients are not part of routine recording and
reporting in TB registers, and are not requested on the annual
WHO TB data collection form.
The Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015. Geneva, World Health
Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/STB/2010.2).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

63

FIGURE 6.2

HIV testing for TB patients, by country, 2010

Percentage of notified
TB cases with known
HIV status
014
1549
5074
75
No data

FIGURE 6.3

Co-trimoxazole preventive therapy (CPT) and antiretroviral


therapy (ART) for HIV-positive TB patients, 20032010
Number of TB patients (thousands)

500
Tested
HIV-positive

400

CPT

300

200
ART
100

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

and South-East Asia regions achieved particularly high


levels of enrolment on CPT, with 76% and 87% of TB
patients known to be living with HIV provided with CPT,
respectively (Table 6.1). Countries that achieved the highest rates of enrolment on CPT in 2010 included Burkina
Faso (96%), Burundi (95%), India (90%), Kenya (100%),
Lesotho (96%), Mozambique (97%), Malawi (94%), Mali
(100%), Myanmar (100%), Namibia (92%), Rwanda
(97%), Swaziland (93%), the United Republic of Tanzania (92%) and Uganda (90%).
The number of HIV-positive TB patients on ART
has grown steadily from a very low level in 2004 (Figure
6.3), reaching over 200 000 in 2010.1 Among TB patients
known to be living with HIV, 46% were on ART globally
(Table 6.1, Figure 6.4). In the African Region, 42% of TB
patients known to be living with HIV were on ART in
2010 and only a few countries (Botswana, Central African Republic, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa and Zambia,
at 4762%) exceeded this level, despite the WHO recommendation that all HIV-positive TB patients are eligible
for ART irrespective of their CD4 cell count. Most of the
ART being provided to TB patients living with HIV is
accounted for by African countries, notably South Africa
1

64

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

In the annual WHO TB data collection form, countries are


asked to report the number of TB patients living with HIV
who started or continued on ART.

BOX 6.1
Better reporting of the outcomes of TB treatment by HIV status is urgently needed

Percent of cohort

The Stop TB Partnership, WHO and UNAIDS have set a target of halving the number of TB deaths among HIV-positive people by
2015 compared with 2004 (the year in which TB mortality among HIV-positive people is estimated to have peaked). Earlier and
prompt diagnosis and treatment of TB as well as antiretroviral therapy (ART) and co-trimoxazole preventive therapy (CPT) can
cut mortality rates among TB patients living with HIV. To assess whether the goal is achieved, data on mortality rates among
HIV-positive TB patients during TB treatment are needed. In turn, this requires that treatment outcomes for TB patients are
disaggregated by HIV status; that is, outcomes are available
for HIV-positive and HIV-negative TB patients separately.
Treatment outcomes for HIV-positive and HIV-negative
TB patients, 2009. Numbers under bars indicate the number of
In 2010, a large number of countries (n=81) reported data on
patients in each cohort, which are slightly larger for a. because
the outcomes of TB treatment disaggregated by HIV status patients not evaluated are included.
(these data are for 2009, given the lag-time in reporting of
treatment outcomes). However, these countries accounted
a. Treatment success
100
for only 21% of the estimated global number of HIVrelated TB cases. The treatment success and death rates
75
reported for HIV-positive TB cases in 2009 were 72% and
20%, respectively, compared with 88% and 3% among HIV50
negative TB cases (see gure right); the remaining patients
had treatment outcomes of failed treatment, transferred out
25
of the district during treatment or their treatment outcome
was not evaluated.1 Among the 63 high TB/HIV burden
0
countries (see list below),2 less than half (n=28) reported
HIV +
HIV HIV +
HIV HIV +
HIV treatment outcomes disaggregated by HIV status.
(62 611) (1 689 075)
(56 998) (874 062)
(15 013) (124 005)
New smear-positive
data from 77 countries

The recording and reporting of the outcomes of TB treatment


disaggregated by HIV status needs to be improved, using
WHO-recommended TB registers (which should also be
used by HIV service providers including in ART clinics).

The death rate for HIV-positive TB cases cited here assumes


that those who were recorded as having defaulted from
treatment also died from TB.
The 63 high TB/HIV burden countries are a combination of
41 countries that were identied as priorities for TB/HIV at
global level in 2002 and that account for 97% of estimated
HIV-positive TB cases globally, plus 22 additional countries that
UNAIDS has dened as having a generalized HIV epidemic. The
41 countries are listed in Table 6.1.
6.1 The other 22 countries are
(in alphabetical order) the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Benin,
the Dominican Republic, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Estonia,
Gabon, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Honduras,
Jamaica, Liberia, Madagascar, the Niger, Panama, Somalia,
Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago.

(Figure 6.5, Figure 6.6). The highest rates of enrolment


on ART were reported by countries in the Region of the
Americas, notably Brazil at 93% (Figure 6.6).
A substantial improvement in ART provision will
be needed to reach the Global Plan target of providing
ART to all TB patients known to be living with HIV by
2015. This could be facilitated by using TB services and
infrastructure to allow decentralization of care delivery
according to national guidelines and the local context.

Percent of cohort

30

New smear
negative/extrapulmonary
data from 63 countries

Retreatment
data from 53 countries

HIV +
HIV (59 381) (1 646 689)

HIV +
HIV (51 821) (821 502)

HIV +
HIV (12 695) (116 642)

New smear-positive
data from 77 countries

New smearnegative/extrapulmonary
data from 63 countries

Retreatment
data from 53 countries

b. Death rate

20

10

6.2

Intensied case-nding and isoniazid


preventive therapy among people
living with HIV

Until 2010, data on intensied screening for TB among


people living with HIV and provision of IPT to those
without active TB were requested from NTPs as part of
the global TB data collection form. In 2011, in an effort to
streamline efforts to collect data and improve the quality
of data, information about these two interventions was
collected by the WHOs HIV department from national
HIV programmes. It should be noted that monitoring of
access to these two interventions at country level is considered weaker than for interventions such as ART, and
thus the reported data need to be interpreted with some
caution.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

65

FIGURE 6.4

TB patients with known HIV status who are HIV-positive and HIV-positive TB patients on co-trimoxazole preventive
therapy (CPT) and antiretroviral therapy (ART), 20052010a
% of TB patients with known HIV status
who are HIV-positive

% of HIV-positive patients on CPT

% of HIV-positive patients on ART

100

Percentage of patients

80

60

40

20

0
2005
a

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2005

2006

Antiretroviral therapy for HIV-positive TB patients by WHO


region and selected countries, 20032010
70

South Africa

60
AFR, other countries
50
Patients (thousands)

2008

2009

2010

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

The solid lines show values for countries that reported data. The shaded areas show upper and lower limits when countries that did not report data are considered.

FIGURE 6.5

40

30
India
20

Kenya
Zambia
AMR
EUR
SEAR, other countries
WPR
EMR

10

0
2003

66

2007

2004 2005 2006

2007 2008

2009 2010

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

The data reported indicate that TB screening among


people living with HIV and provision of IPT have steadily
increased, particularly since 2007 (Figure 6.7, Figure 6.8).
In 2010, 2.3 million were screened for TB (up from 1.7
million in 2009) and 178 000 of those without active TB
were enrolled on IPT (double the level achieved in 2009).
The number of people living with HIV who were
screened for TB was equivalent to more than half (58%,
2 302 680/3 956 326) of the reported number of people
who were enrolled in HIV care worldwide in 2010. The
number started on IPT was 12% (178 144/1 464 579) of
the reported number of people living with HIV newly enrolled in HIV care in 2010. Intensied efforts are
needed to approach the Global Plans targets of providing
screening for TB for all those enrolled in HIV care and
providing IPT to all those attending HIV care services
who are eligible for it by 2015. The examples of Cambodia and South Africa illustrate the major progress that
can be achieved in a short time when new WHO guidelines are adopted and implemented (Box 6.2).

FIGURE 6.6

ART provision and percentage of HIV-positive TB patients on ART, 2010. The area of each box represents the number of
HIV-positive TB patients on ART

AFR

AMR

South Africa

Zimbabwe

UR Tanzania

Mozambique

Nigeria

Brazil

Rest of AMR

EUR
Malawi

Uganda

Rest of AFR

Kenya

Zambia

Swaziland

Ethiopia

Namibia

Lesotho

Russian
Federation

Botswana
Rest of EUR
WPR

Cte dIvoire

China

India

% of HIV-positive TB patients on ART

Rest of SEAR

SEAR
Thailand

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Viet
Nam

EMR
90

FIGURE 6.7

FIGURE 6.8

Intensied TB case-nding among HIV-positive people,


20052010

IPT provision among HIV-positive people, 20052010

100

200
Number of HIV-positive people without
active TB (thousands)

Number of people screened (millions)

2.5

Rest
of
WPR

2.0

1.5

1.0

0.5

150

100

50

0
2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

67

BOX 6.2
Uptake of new WHO guidelines leads to rapid scale up of isoniazid preventive therapy
Recent WHO guidelines on TB screening and isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT) among people living with HIV were adopted and
implemented by Cambodia and South Africa in 2010. The guidelines recommend screening using four symptoms (current cough,
fever, weight loss and night sweats) and providing IPT if these symptoms are absent.1 This symptom-based screening algorithm
has been found to have a negative predictive value of 97.7% (95%condence interval, 97.498.0) in settings where the prevalence
of TB among people living with HIV is 5%.2
An HIV counselling and testing campaign in South Africa in 2010 aimed at all sexually-active individuals aged >12 years included
TB screening based on the new guidelines. The guidelines were also reected in planning and implementation of collaborative TB/
HIV activities in Cambodia in 2010.
In South Africa, the number of people living with HIV who were provided with IPT increased by more than ve-fold in one year,
from 23 583 in 2009 to 124 049 in 2010. In Cambodia, the numbers provided with IPT increased seven-fold in one year, from 66
in 2009 to 491 in 2010.
To complement this large and rapid scale-up in the provision of IPT, emphasis on adherence to therapy as well as monitoring of
resistance to isoniazid are needed.

68

Guidelines for intensied tuberculosis case nding and isoniazid preventive therapy for people living with HIV in resource constrained settings.
Geneva, World Health Organization, 2010.

Getahun H et al. Development of a standardized screening rule for tuberculosis in people living with HIV in resource constrained settings:
individual participant data meta-analysis of observational studies. PLoS Medicine, 2011, 8(1) e1000391 (doi:10.1371/journal.pmed).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

CHAPTER 7

Research and development

KEY MESSAGES
 Progress in TB care and control is constrained by old
technologies.
 During the past decade, efforts to develop new
diagnostics, drugs and vaccines for TB have intensied
and considerable progress has been made.
 Several new diagnostic tests or methods have been
endorsed by WHO since 2007, including Xpert MTB/RIF
that has the potential to transform the diagnosis of TB and
rifampicin-resistant TB. Other new tests, including pointof-care tests, are in the pipeline.
 For the rst time in 40 years, there is a coordinated
portfolio of promising new drugs on the horizon. There are
10 new or repurposed TB drugs in trials, which have the
potential to shorten the treatment of drug-susceptible TB
and to improve the treatment of multidrug-resistant TB
(MDR-TB). Results from three Phase III trials of 4-month
regimens for the treatment of drug-susceptible TB are
expected between 2012 and 2013. Results from two
Phase II trials of new drugs for the treatment of MDR-TB
are expected in 2012.
 There are 10 vaccine candidates for the prevention of
TB in Phase I or Phase II trials. It is hoped that one or two
of the candidates currently in a Phase II trial will enter a
Phase III trial in the next 23 years, with the possibility of
licensing at least one new vaccine by 2018.
 Funding for TB research and development has
increased in recent years, reaching US$ 614 million
in 2009, but still falls far short of the annual target of
US$ 1.8 billion that is included in the Global Plan to Stop
TB 20112015.

Major progress in TB care and control has been achieved


since the introduction of the DOTS strategy in the
mid-1990s and the launch of its successor, the Stop TB
Strategy, in 2006 (Chapters 26). However, progress is
constrained by old technologies. To achieve the Stop TB
Partnerships target of eliminating TB by 2050 (Chapter
1), a transformation in TB prevention, diagnosis and
treatment is required.1
During the past decade, efforts to develop new diagnostics, drugs and vaccines for TB have intensied.
Three publicprivate partnerships have been created: the
Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (in 2003),
which works on the development of novel diagnostics for
TB among a range of other diseases; the TB Alliance (in
2000) for new anti-TB drugs; and Aeras (in 2003) for new
TB vaccines. The Stop TB Partnership has established
working groups for new diagnostics, new drugs and new
vaccines. Although the total funding available for TB
research and development falls short of the US$ 1.8 billion per year that is called for in the Global Plan to Stop TB
20112015,2 funding increased from US$ 363 million in
2005 to US$ 614 million in 2009.3 Sources of funding
include the United States National Institutes of Health,
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the European
Union, the European and Developing Countries Clinical
Trials Partnership (EDCTP) and several other national,
bilateral and multilateral agencies and philanthropic
organizations.
This chapter presents the status of progress in the
development of new diagnostics, new drugs and new vaccines for TB in mid-2011, using information provided by
the respective Working Groups of the Stop TB Partner1

Abu-Raddad LJ et al. Epidemiological benets of more effective tuberculosis vaccines, drugs and diagnostics. Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,
2009, 106(33):13980139805. The analysis in this paper indicated that TB incidence could be reduced by 71% by 2015 in
the South-East Asia Region with the combined use of a neonatal pre-exposure vaccination, a 2-month drug regimen with
high efcacy for drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB, and
a rapid test to diagnose TB. To achieve elimination (de ned
as less than one case per million population per year) would
require new delivery strategies such as mass vaccination campaigns, and new products targeted at people with latent TB
infection.
The Global Plan to Stop TB, 20112015. Geneva, World Health
Organization, 2010 (WHO/HTM/STB/2010.2).
2010 report on tuberculosis research funding trends, 20052009.
Treatment Action Group, 2010.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

69

FIGURE 7.1

The development pipeline for new diagnostics, 2011

REFERENCE LEVEL
New SS+ case definition
Xpert MTB/RIF
2-specimen approaches
LED microscopy
Same-day diagnosis

1040

Manual NAAT 1st generation


Rapid colorimetric DST
INTERMEDIATE LEVEL

70

Access after 5 years (%)

Distance from patients

Liquid culture and DST


Rapid speciation
LPA for MDR-TB
Non-commercial culture and DST (MODS, NRA, CRI)
LPA for XDR-TB

POC test (detection of TB)


Prediction (LTBI)
Manual NAAT 2nd generation
PERIPHERAL LEVEL

2007

2008

95

2009

Technologies or methods endorsed by WHO

2010

2011

2012

Technologies at late stages of development

2013

2014

2015

2016

Technologies at early stages of development

Abbreviations: DST Drug susceptibility test; NAAT Nucleic acid amplication test; LTBI Latent TB infection; POC Point of care; MODS Microscopic observation drugsusceptibility; NRA Nitrate reductase assay; CRI Colorimetric redox indicator assay; LED Light-emitting diode; LPA Line probe assay

ship. It also highlights two documents nalized in 2011


that address the continuum of research from fundamental science to operational research.

7.1

New diagnostics for TB

The most commonly used diagnostic test for TB, sputum


smear microscopy, is over 100 years old. It is a relatively
insensitive test and it cannot be used to identify paucibacillary or extrapulmonary TB. Diagnosis using culture
methods the current gold standard requires laboratory infrastructure that is not widely available in countries
with a high burden of TB (Chapter 5), and results take
weeks. Conventional methods used to diagnose MDRTB also rely on culturing of specimens followed by drug
susceptibility testing (DST); results take weeks and not
all laboratories with capacity to perform DST for rstline drugs have the capability to perform DST for second-line drugs. New diagnostic tests that are comparable
to culture in terms of accuracy but which also allow rapid
diagnosis and can be used at the lowest level of health
systems are needed. The ideal is a simple, rapid, point-ofcare test that can be used to diagnose both TB and MDRTB outside the setting of a conventional laboratory.
The status of the pipeline for new diagnostics in July
2011 is illustrated in Figure 7.1.
Various new tests and methods have been endorsed by
WHO in the past four years. Since 2007, endorsed tests
and methods include liquid culture and rapid speciation for faster diagnosis of TB and MDR-TB, molecular

70

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

line probe assays (LPAs) for rapid testing for MDR-TB,


non-commercial culture methods for rapid DST, lightemitting diode (LED) uorescence microscopes for better diagnosis using smear microscopy, and Xpert MTB/
RIF for the rapid diagnosis of TB and rifampicin-resistant TB. These are beginning to be implemented in
countries (Chapter 5), and Xpert MTB/RIF in particular
(a fully automated, cartridge-based, nucleic acid amplication test) has the potential to transform the diagnosis of TB and drug-resistant TB. It is suitable for use at
district and sub-district levels, and results are available
within 2 hours. As Xpert MTB/RIF is rolled out worldwide (Chapter 5), data are also being collected to evaluate
its performance in programmatic conditions.1 It should
be emphasized that countries implementing Xpert MTB/
RIF still need to establish conventional laboratory capacity to monitor treatment progress and to perform DST for
drugs other than rifampicin. The EXPAND-TB project
is helping to accelerate access to such laboratory capacity
in many countries (Chapter 5).
Tests that are in the late stages of development include
a second-generation LPA for rapid testing for extensively
drug-resistant TB in reference laboratories and a rapid
test for detection of TB in microscopy centres. Technologies that are in the early stages of development include
point-of care tests for TB and tests for prediction of latent
TB infection.
1

www.stoptb.org/wg/gli/xpert

7.2

New drugs for the treatment and


prevention of TB

The anti-TB drugs used in rst-line treatments are


around 50 years old. The regimen that is currently recommended by WHO for new cases of drug-susceptible TB is highly efcacious, with cure rates of around
90% in HIV-negative patients. Nonetheless, it entails 6
months of treatment with rst-line drugs (a combination
of rifampicin, isoniazid, ethambutol and pyrazinamide
for 2 months, followed by a 4-month continuation phase
of rifampicin and isoniazid). Recommended regimens for
MDR-TB require at least 20 months of treatment with
second-line drugs, are associated with multiple (and
sometimes serious) side-effects, and cure rates are lower
(usually in the range 6075%). There are also interactions between TB treatment and antiretroviral therapy
(ART) for people living with HIV. New drugs are required
to shorten and simplify treatment, to improve the efcacy
and tolerability of treatment for MDR-TB and to improve
the simultaneous treatment of TB and HIV among people living with HIV. New drugs could also help to treat
latent TB infection in people without active TB disease;
at present, preventive therapy usually consists of 69
months of isoniazid monotherapy.
The status of the pipeline for new anti-TB drugs in
July 2011 is illustrated in Figure 7.2.
For the rst time in 40 years, there is a coordinated
portfolio of promising new compounds on the horizon,
some of which have the potential to become the cornerstone drugs of TB treatment in the future. There are 10
new or repurposed TB drugs under clinical investigation,
one of which is in a Phase I (safety) trial, seven are in
Phase II (early bactericidal activity and sputum culture

conversion) trials, and three are in Phase III (efcacy)


trials (rifapentine is being evaluated in both a Phase II
and a Phase III trial).
Two of the Phase III trials are evaluating 4-month regimens (in which a uoroquinolone either gatioxacin or
moxioxacin is used in place of ethambutol or isoniazid) for the treatment of drug-susceptible TB, and results
are expected between 2012 and 2013. The third Phase
III trial is evaluating the use of rifapentine (a rifamycin
that has a longer half-life than rifampicin) as part of a
4-month regimen. The use of rifapentine in combination
with isoniazid for a shorter (3 months) treatment of latent
TB infection is also being evaluated.
Of the compounds in Phase II trials, two are in the
advanced stages of being tested for the treatment of MDRTB. These are TMC-207 (bedaquiline) and OPC-67683
(delamanid). Both compounds have been evaluated in
Phase IIb trials in newly-diagnosed MDR-TB patients, in
which either the investigational drug or a placebo were
added to an optimized background regimen. Final results
are expected in 2012.
Other compounds in Phase II trials include linezolid,
which is being tested for the treatment of extensively
drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) at a dose of 600 mg (in the
Republic of Korea) and at a dose of 300 mg for the treatment of MDR-TB (in South Africa); PNU-100480 (a close
analogue of linezolid); PA-824; and SQ-109 (a derivative of ethambutol). In November 2010, the rst clinical
trial of a novel TB drug regimen (NC001), investigating
the bactericidal activity of a three-drug combination of
PA-824, moxioxacin and pyrazinamide, was initiated;
results are very encouraging.
These major advances in TB drug development mean
that multiple trials will be needed in various high-burden

FIGURE 7.2

The development pipeline for new drugs, 2011


Discovery

Lead
identication

 Summit PLC
compounds

Preclinical development

Lead
optimization

 Nitroimidazoles
 Mycobacterial
Gyrase Inhibitors
 Riminophenazines
 Diarylquinoline
 Translocase-1
Inhibitor
 MGyrX1 inhibitor
 InhA Inhibitor
 GyrB inhibitor
 LeuRS Inhibitor
 Pyrazinamide
Analogs

Preclinical
development

 CPZEN-45
 SQ641
 SQ609
 DC-159a
 Benzothiazinone
 Q201

Clinical development

Phase I

 AZD5847

Phase II

 TMC-207
 OPC-67683
 PA-824
 Linezolid
 Rifapentine
 SQ-109
 PNU-100480
 Novel Regimensa

Phase III

 Gatioxacin
 Moxioxacin
 Rifapentine

Note: This table only includes projects that have identied a promising molecule (known as a lead compound).
a

The rst clinical trial (NC001) of a novel TB drug regimen testing the three-drug combination of PA-824, moxioxacin and pyrazinamide was initiated in November 2010.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

71

FIGURE 7.3

The development pipeline for new vaccines, 2011


Preclinical development
Mtb [lysA panCD secA2]

Phase I
VPM 1002

M72

P
MTBVAC01 [phoP, fad D26]

AERAS-422

B PI
B PI TI

P B PI IT
Hybrid 56+IC31

P B PI
HG85 A/B

B IT

P B

AERAS-402/
Crucell Ad35

P B PI

P B PI
Hyvac 4/ AERAS-404

P
B
PI
IT

Prime
Boost
Post-infection
Immunotherapy

Preclinical vaccine candidates are not yet in clinical trials, but have been manufactured
under Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) for clinical use and have undergone some
preclinical testing that meets regulatory standards.

countries. This presents several challenges. Trials are


lengthy and costly, since patients need to be followed for
an extended period of time after completing treatment.
New drugs have to be tested in specied drug combinations with current and/or newly re-purposed drugs; to
facilitate this, novel biomarkers for treatment response
and sterilizing activity, new approaches to the design of
clinical trials and increased capacity (including staff and
infrastructure) to implement trials in accordance with
international standards are required. The recent establishment of the Critical Path to New TB Drug Regimens
(CPTR) initiative, whose goal is to accelerate the development of novel regimens that will shorten TB treatment,
is an important step in this direction. The CPTR is a
broad coalition of stakeholders spearheaded by the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation, the TB Alliance and the
Critical Path Institute, and includes almost all pharmaceutical companies with compounds in clinical trials for
TB treatment.

New vaccines for the prevention of TB

The Bacille-Calmette-Gurin (BCG) vaccine to prevent


TB is almost 100 years old. It has been shown to provide protection against severe forms of TB in children
(meningitis and miliary TB), but its efcacy in preventing pulmonary TB in adults varies among countries.
BCG is not recommended for use in infants known to be
infected with HIV, due to the risk of disseminated BCG
disease. Historic opportunities for the development of
new TB vaccines arose during the 1990s, following the
development of techniques for genetic manipulation of
mycobacteria and completion of the genome sequence of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
There are two main approaches to improving TB vaccination. The rst is a prime-boost strategy in which

72

B PI IT

Hybrid-I+IC31

Hybrid-I+CAF01

Spray-dried BCG

7.3

MVA85A/
AERAS-485

AdAg85A

HBHA

Phase III

RUTI

Phase IIb

Phase II

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

BCG is given to neonates (as now) and then a new vaccine is given as a booster dose. The new vaccine would
be delivered to infants alongside other vaccines at 39
months of age and/or as a separate booster in young
adults. The second approach is to develop vaccines that
would replace BCG (i.e. new prime vaccines), such as
an improved version of BCG or an attenuated live Mycobacterium tuberculosis vaccine. It is anticipated that a booster vaccine on top of BCG will lead the way to replacement
of BCG.
The status of the pipeline for new vaccines in July 2011
is illustrated in Figure 7.3. There are 10 vaccine candidates in clinical trials, of which six are in Phase I trials, two are in Phase II trials and two are in Phase IIb
trials. Phase I trials are conducted with a small number
of healthy volunteers (4090 people) to ensure that the
vaccine candidate is safe, to assess immunological reactions, and to begin to determine dosage levels. Phase II
trials involve larger numbers of volunteers (from a few
hundred to a few thousand) to continue testing safety as
well as to determine optimal dosage levels and the timing of vaccination. In Phase IIb trials, preliminary data
on protective efcacy are also collected. Phase III trials
involve many thousands of participants and are used to
determine the protective efcacy of a vaccine; the quality
of data must meet the standards required for a vaccine to
be licensed.
Of the vaccines that are currently being tested,
MVA85A is at the most advanced stage of clinical development. It is being tested in Phase IIb trials in Africa,
including among people living with HIV. It is hoped that
one or two of the candidates currently in Phase IIb trials
will enter a Phase III trial in the next 23 years, with the
possibility of licensing at least one new vaccine by 2018,
either alone or in combination.

It should be highlighted that capacity (staff and infrastructure) for large-scale trials of vaccines needs to be
increased in several endemic countries. At the same time,
cohort studies in infants and adolescents that are under
way in several countries need to be continued to provide
important baseline data about TB incidence and to help
determine the suitability of sites for large-scale vaccine
efcacy trials.

7.4

Fundamental science and operational


research

Besides the research and development discussed in


sections 7.17.3, fundamental science and operational
research are essential for improved TB care and control.
The former is required to better characterize Mycobac-

terium tuberculosis and to improve understanding of the


interaction between the bacillus and the human host, as
a basis for maintaining the ow of new technologies into
the product pipeline. The latter is required to identify the
most effective ways of using available tools.
In the past year, the TB Research Movement of the
Stop TB Partnership has developed a road map that sets
out research priorities across the continuum from fundamental science to operational research.1 A document on
operational research specically has also been developed
in the last year by the Stop TB Partnership, WHO and
the Global Fund.2 This de nes the critical questions to
be addressed by operational research, and the appropriate study methods to use.

The roadmap is available at www.stoptb.org/global/


research
Priorities in operational research to improve tuberculosis care and
control. Available at www.stoptb.org/assets/documents/
resources/publications/technical

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

73

ANNEX 1

Methods used
to estimate the burden of
disease caused by TB

This annex explains the methods that were used to produce estimates of the global burden of disease caused
by TB (measured in terms of incidence, prevalence and
mortality). It has nine major sections:
 General approach. This section provides some background information about the methods used to produce estimates of disease burden.
 De nitions. This section de nes TB incidence, prevalence and mortality, the case fatality rate (CFR) and
the case notication rate. It also explains the regions
for which estimates of disease burden are produced
and sources of information on population estimates.
 Estimates of TB incidence, 19902010. This section explains the main methods used to estimate TB
incidence, and the countries for which they have been
applied. Specic attention is given to estimates for
China and India.
 Estimates of HIV prevalence among incident TB
cases, 19902010. This section explains the methods
used to estimate the prevalence of HIV among incident cases of TB.
 Estimates of TB prevalence, 19902010. This section explains the methods used to estimate TB prevalence. These are national surveys of the prevalence of
TB disease and indirect estimates based on combining
estimates of incidence with estimates of the duration
of TB disease.
 Estimates of the number of cases of multidrugresistant TB (MDR-TB). This section explains how
estimates of the proportion of notied cases of TB
that had MDR-TB in 2010 were produced and used to
assess the number of prevalent cases of MDR-TB in
2010. Methods to analyse trends in the proportion of
new cases of TB with MDR-TB among notied cases
19942010 are also explained.
 Estimates of TB mortality, 19902010. This section explains the two methods used to estimate TB
mortality. These are direct measurements from vital
registration (VR) or survey data and indirect estimates
based on combining estimates of TB incidence with
estimates of the CFR. The countries for which these
methods have been used are explained. Methods for
estimating TB mortality in HIV-infected individuals
and TB mortality by age and sex are also described.
 Projections of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality. This section explains how projections up to
2015 were produced.
 Uncertainty framework. This section explains the
general approach to including uncertainty in all estimates.

1. General approach
Estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB (measured in terms of incidence, prevalence and mortality) are
produced annually by WHO using information gathered through surveillance systems (case notications
and death registrations), special studies (including surveys of the prevalence of disease and in-depth analyses
of surveillance data), expert opinion and consultations
with countries. Two recent publications provide up-todate guidance about how TB incidence, prevalence and
mortality should be measured,1 based on the work of the
WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement.2
The methods used to estimate the burden of disease
were updated in 2009 following 18 months of work by
an expert group convened by the Task Force. Improvements to methods included systematic documentation of
expert opinion and how this has been used to produce
estimates of disease burden, simplication of models, 3
updates to parameter values based on the results of systematic reviews, much greater use of mortality data from
VR systems and systematic documentation of uncertainty (hence the uncertainty intervals shown on all of the
estimates of disease burden in this report).

2. Denitions
2.1 Incidence, prevalence, mortality, the case
fatality rate and the case notication rate
Incidence is de ned as the number of new and relapse
cases of TB (all forms) occurring in a given year. Relapse
cases are de ned as a new episode of TB in people who
have had TB in the past and for whom there was bacteriological con rmation of cure and/or documentation
that treatment was completed (Box 3.1, Chapter 3). In the
remainder of this Annex, relapse cases are referred to as
recurrent cases, in line with expected changes in terminology that will be introduced by WHO in the near future
and because the term is more useful when explaining the
estimation of TB incidence. Recurrent cases may be true
relapses or a new episode of TB caused by reinfection. In
current case de nitions, both relapse cases and patients
who require a change in treatment are called retreatment cases. However, people with a continuing episode

TB impact measurement: policy and recommendations for how to


assess the epidemiological burden of TB and the impact of TB control.
Geneva, World Health Organization, 2009 (Stop TB policy
paper no. 2; WHO/HTM/TB/2009.416). The policy paper
is available on the Task Forces website www.who.int/tb/
advisory_bodies/impact_measurement_taskforce
For further details, see the Task Force web site at: www.who.
int/tb/advisory_bodies/impact_measurement_taskforce.
The review is also the basis for the TB component of the
update to the Global Burden of Disease, due for publication in
2011 (www.who.int/topics/global_burden_of_disease).
For example, some parameter values are now estimated only
at global level or for regions, rather than for each country
individually.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

77

of TB that requires a treatment change are prevalent cases, not incident cases.
Prevalence is de ned as the number of TB cases (all
forms) at a given point in time.
Mortality. According to the latest revision of the international classication of diseases (ICD-10), TB mortality
is the number of deaths caused by TB in HIV-negative
people. TB deaths among HIV-positive people are classied as HIV deaths in ICD-10. For this reason, estimates
of deaths caused by TB in HIV-positive people are presented separately from those in HIV-negative people.
The case fatality rate is the risk of death from TB among
people with active TB disease.1
The case notication rate refers to new and recurrent
episodes of TB notied to WHO for a given year, expressed
per 100 000 population. The case notication rate for
new and recurrent TB is important in the estimation of
TB incidence. It is important to highlight, however, that
in some countries information on treatment history may
be missing for some cases. When data on treatment history are not available, recurrent cases cannot be distinguished from cases whose treatment was changed, since
both are registered and reported in the category retreatment. An assessment of data for patients reported in the
unknown history category is conducted with national
TB control programmes (NTPs) to determine the proportion of such patients that is included in the category
of recurrent cases.

2.2 Regions
Regional analyses are generally undertaken for the six
WHO regions (that is, the African Region, the Region
of the Americas, the Eastern Mediterranean Region, the
European Region, the South-East Asia Region and the
Western Pacic Region). For analyses related to MDRTB, nine epidemiological regions were de ned. These
were African countries with high HIV prevalence, African countries with low HIV prevalence, Central Europe,
Eastern Europe, high-income countries,2 Latin America, the Eastern Mediterranean Region (excluding highincome countries), the South-East Asia Region (excluding
high-income countries) and the Western Pacic Region
(excluding high-income countries). The list of countries
in the rst six of these nine regions is provided in Appendix 1; the other countries are listed under the WHO
regions of which they are a part in Annex 3.

3. Estimates of TB incidence, 19902010


No country has ever undertaken a nationwide survey of
TB incidence because of the large sample sizes required
and associated major logistic and nancial challenges. As
a result, there are no direct measurements of the incidence of TB. Theoretically, data from TB surveillance
systems that are linked to health systems of high coverage and performance may capture all (or almost all)
incident cases of TB. However, as yet no standard and
widely-endorsed criteria and benchmarks for classifying
TB surveillance systems are available. The WHO Global
Task Force on TB Impact Measurement is working on
the development of such standards (Chapter 2).
In the absence of direct measurements, estimates of
TB incidence for almost all countries rely on methods
described in sections 3.13.4. The methods used to estimate TB incidence in China and India are explained
separately, in section 3.5 and section 3.6 respectively, following national workshops held in China (in June 2011)
and India (in July 2011).
It should be emphasized that incidence estimates are
no longer derived from surveys of the prevalence of tuberculous infection as measured in tuberculin surveys. The
WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement
has agreed that methods for deriving incidence from the
prevalence of infection are unreliable. The Task Force
has also stated that it is doubtful whether repeat tuberculin surveys provide a reliable estimate of the trend in
TB incidence.4

3.1 Estimating TB incidence from estimates of the


proportion of cases detected
Notication data for new and recurrent cases have been
analysed in combination with evidence about the coverage of the TB surveillance system and expert opinion in
six regional workshops and country missions held during the period 20092011, according to a framework
developed by the WHO Global Task Force on TB Impact
Measurement (Figure 2.2, Chapter 2). By mid-2011, these
workshops and country missions had covered 96 countries (Figure 2.1, Chapter 2).
For the 96 countries covered by these regional workshops and country missions, incidence was estimated
according to the following equation:

2.3 Population estimates


Where population sizes are needed to calculate TB indicators, the 2010 revision of estimates provided by the
United Nations Population Division (UNPD) was used.3
The UNPD estimates sometimes differ from those made
by countries.

78

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Straetemans M et al. Assessing tuberculosis case fatality ratio:


a meta-analysis. PLoS One. 2011, 6(6):e20755.
High-income countries are de ned by the World Bank as
countries with a per capita gross national income (GNI) of
US$ 12 276 or more in 2010.
http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/unpp/panel_population.
htm; accessed August 2011.
TB impact measurement: policy and recommendations for how to
assess the epidemiological burden of TB and the impact of TB control.
Geneva, World Health Organization, 2009 (Stop TB policy
paper; no. 2 (WHO/HTM/TB/2009.416).

incidence =

First, the variance for the distribution was taken as:

case notications
1 underreporting

V=

Expert opinion about the proportion of TB cases1 that


were not reported was elicited for three reference years
(1997, 2003 and, depending on when the workshop
was held, either 2008 or 2009). This was done following in-depth analysis of notication data (including data
from sub-national administrative levels), programmatic
data reecting efforts in TB control (for example, data
on infrastructure, staf ng, the performance of services
and funding) and (where available) data from inventory
studies.2 In addition, data on access to health care from
Demographic and Health Surveys and the overall performance of health systems (using indicators such as the
infant mortality rate) were used to substantiate opinion
on the proportion of cases with no or very limited access
to health care (Table A1.1).
A full description of the methods used in these workshops is available in a report of the workshop held for
countries in the African Region (in Harare, Zimbabwe,
December 2010).3
TABLE A1.1

Sources of information and data on TB incidence used in


regional workshops and country missions

POSSIBLE CATEGORIES OF INCIDENT CASES

SOURCES OF DATA

Do not have physical or nancial


access to health care

Demographic and
health surveys,
KABPa surveys

Seek care, but TB not diagnosed

Survey

TB diagnosed, but not reported

Inventory survey

Reported cases

TB surveillance

Capture
recapture
modelling

KABP = knowledge, attitudes, behaviour and practices.

Distributions of the proportion of cases that were not


reported in the three reference years were assumed to
follow a Beta distribution. Reasons for using Beta distributions include the following:
 They are continuous and de ned on the interval (0,
1). Since the variance of the proportions of cases that
were not reported tend to be large as a result of high
uncertainty, random draws of numbers from a normal
distribution would yield numbers outside the interval
(0, 1). The use of truncated normal distributions may
result in excess density towards one of the bounds.

The shape and scale parameters necessary to de ne the


Beta distribution were computed using the method of
moments, as follows:

where l and u are the lower and upper bounds of the plausible range for the proportion of incident cases that were
reported (also referred to as the case detection rate in
Chapter 3).
Shape 1 (noted _) and 2 (noted `) follow from:
s=

E(l E)
l
V

_ = sE
` = s(l E)
where E is the expected value of the istribution (Table
A1.2).
Time series for the period 19902010 were built according to the characteristics of the levels of underreporting that were estimated for the three reference years. A
cubic spline extrapolation of V and E, with knots set at
the reference years, was used for countries with low-level
or concentrated HIV epidemics. In countries with a generalized HIV epidemic, the trajectory of incidence from
1990 to the rst reference year (usually 1997) was based
on the annual rate of change in HIV prevalence. Incidence trajectories were derived from the series of notied TB cases using Monte Carlo simulations from which
expected values, 2.5th and 97.5th centiles were extracted.
All computations were conducted in the R statistical
environment.5
If there were insufcient data to determine the factors
leading to time-changes in case notications, incidence
was assumed to follow a horizontal trend going through
the most recent estimate of incidence.

 They are not necessarily symmetrical.


 They are de ned with two parameters that can be
estimated from available data using the method of
moments.4

ul

De ned as cases of all forms of TB, including sputum smearpositive pulmonary cases, sputum smear-negative pulmonary
cases, and extrapulmonary cases.
Measurements from inventory studies can be used to quantify the number of cases that are diagnosed but not reported
to national surveillance systems. In some circumstances, data
from these studies can be used to estimate the number of
cases that were not diagnosed as well (using capture-recapture methods. A useful reference on capture-recapture methods is: Chao A et al. The applications of capture-recapture
models to epidemiological data. Statistics in Medicine, 2001,
20(20):31233157.
See www.who.int/tb/advisory_bodies/impact_measurement_
taskforce. The tools (called TISAT and the Workbook) used
in regional workshops and country missions are also available
on the Task Forces web site.
Rnyi A. Probability theory. New York, Dover Publications Inc.,
2007.
R Development Core Team. R: a language and environment for
statistical computing. Vienna, R Foundation for Statistical Computing, 2009 (www.R-project.org).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

79

TABLE A1.2

Parameter estimates used to produce estimates of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality


MODEL PARAMETER

Incidence, high-income countries

DISTRIBUTION PARAMETERSb

DISTRIBUTION

Beta

(1 )

_=.

` = (1 ) .

(1 )
V

where was set at 1.3 times the notication rate, noted N, and V is
dened by:
0.3

V=
HIV prevalence among incident TB

Beta

_ = x .

2
N

x (1 x )
V

` = (1 x ) .

x (1
x)
V

Where
x is the expected value and V is given by:
ul 2
V=
4
Duration of disease, non-notied
HIV-negative cases of TB

Uniform

l = 1, u = 4 (years)

Duration of disease, non-notied


HIV-positive cases of TB

Uniform

l = 0.01, u = 0.2 (years)

Duration of disease, notied


HIV-negative cases of TB

Uniform

l = 0.2, u = 2 (years)

Duration of disease, notied


HIV-positive cases of TB

Uniform

l = 0.01, u = 1 (years)

The probability density function of the Beta distribution is: (x; _, `) =

u and l denote upper and lower bounds.

x _1 (1 x) `1
t (1 t) `1 dt

1 _1
0

3.2 Estimating TB incidence from data on case


notications and expert opinion for highincome countries
For high-income countries, the level of TB incidence was
assumed to be distributed between the notication rate
for new and recurrent cases combined (lower uncertainty
bound, noted l) and 1.3 times the notication rate (upper
uncertainty bound, noted u), as informed by expert opinion. The distribution of incidence was assumed to follow
a Beta distribution with shape and scale parameters computed using the method of moments, as described above.
In the absence of country-specic data on the quality
and coverage of TB surveillance systems, it was assumed
that TB surveillance systems from countries in the
high-income group performed similarly well, although
the model does allow for stochastic uctuations. The
exception was the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland, where the underreporting of TB cases
has been recently measured using inventory studies and
capture-recapture modelling.1 The results were used to
measure TB incidence directly.

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WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

3.3 Estimating TB incidence from empirical


measurements of disease prevalence
Incidence can be estimated using measurements from
national surveys of the prevalence of TB disease combined with estimates of the duration of disease. Incidence
is estimated as the prevalence of TB divided by the average duration of disease.
In practice, the duration of disease cannot be directly
measured. For example, measurements of the duration
of symptoms in prevalent TB cases that are detected during a prevalence survey are systematically biased towards
lower values, since active case- nding truncates the natural history of undiagnosed disease. Measurements of
the duration of disease in notied cases ignore the duration of disease among non-notied and untreated cases.
Literature reviews commissioned by the WHO Global
Task Force on TB Impact Measurement have provided
estimates of the duration of disease in untreated TB cases
1

Tuberculosis in the UK: annual report on tuberculosis surveillance in the UK 2010. London, Health Protection Agency
Centre for Infections, 2010 (www.hpa.org.uk/web/HPA
web&HPAwebSt a nda rd / HPAweb_C /1287143581697;
accessed 15 July 2011.

from the pre-chemotherapy era (before the 1950s). The


best estimate of the mean duration of disease (for smearpositive cases and smear-negative cases combined) in
HIV-negative individuals is about three years. However,
the proportion of incident cases that remain untreated is
unknown. There are few data on the duration of disease
in HIV-positive individuals.
When measurements from two prevalence surveys
were available, trends in TB prevalence were derived by
tting a log-linear model to available measurements.
When three or more prevalence measurements were
available, the prevalence trajectory was built using cubic
spline interpolation. If only one prevalence survey measurement was available, time-trends were assessed using
in-depth analysis of surveillance data, as described above.
In this report, the prevalence to incidence method was
used for only one country (Viet Nam), following a meeting in early 2009 in which consensus was reached among
national experts and experts from WHO and the KNCV
Tuberculosis Foundation.

3.4 Estimating TB incidence from previously


published time-series of incidence
In all remaining countries (n=57), previously published
time-series of TB incidence were extended by tting a
log-linear model to the estimates for 20062009, to predict a value for 2010.

3.5 TB incidence in China


As noted at the beginning of this section, if TB surveillance performs to high standards then the best source of
information on TB incidence comes from routine notication data. In China, there is a web-based and casebased mandatory TB reporting system that has been
fully operational since 2005. It covers very close to 100%
of all detected TB cases.
During a national workshop held in Beijing in June
2011, incidence was estimated in two stages. First, the
plausible interval for TB incidence in 2009 was set at
11.3 times the level of notications, which is comparable to most high-income countries. This plausible interval was justied based on the observations that (i) the
ratio of TB mortality to TB notications in China was
close to that observed in high-income countries; and (ii)
the performance of the TB surveillance system is high.
Second, trends in incidence were computed backwards
in time from 2009 to 1990 and forwards in time to 2010
based on measured trends in rates of TB mortality and
TB prevalence in adults, adjusted for the rapidly aging
population. The workshop estimated that incidence in
adults declined by 35% per year on average, with an ageadjusted decline of 3.4% per year (standard deviation,
0.58%). This estimate can be considered conservative
given that the decline in TB prevalence is under-estimated (see Box 2.6 in Chapter 2 for further explanation).

3.6 TB incidence in India


Incidence for 2010 was estimated according to the methods described in section 3.1, including use of results from
two subnational inventory studies. The level of underreporting for 2010 was estimated at 41% (range, 3547%).
National inventory studies will be needed to fully understand the extent to which TB cases are diagnosed in the
private sector but not reected in the national surveillance system.
In the absence of any clear trend in case notications and no survey measurements taken before 2001,
the trend in incidence was estimated to be at between
1990 and 2001. This was also justied on the basis that
implementation of the Revised TB Control Programme
in India only began in parts of the country in 1999, with
no evidence of improvements in TB control in the previous decade.
For the trend between 2001 and 2010, data from
tuberculin surveys and notication data were used. Two
national tuberculin surveys were conducted around
2000 and 2010. Despite difculties in interpreting the
second survey as a result of unfavourable distributions of
reaction sizes as well as systematic differences between
the two surveys (such as use of different tuberculins),
the estimated decline in the annual risk of infection was
estimated at 3.7% per year (95% condence interval, 2.4
5.1% per year). This rate of decline was the basis for setting a prior beta distribution for the decline in incidence.
In districts with early implementation (19992003)
of the Revised TB Control Programme, the average
annual rate of decline in case notication rates varied
between 0.6% and 3.6% per year. Combining the previous estimate from the tuberculin survey data with the
observed notication data led to a posterior distribution
of the annual rate of decline in TB incidence that had
an expected value of 1.5% per year (standard deviation,
0.071).

3.7 Disaggregations of TB incidence


In this report, TB incidence is only disaggregated by
HIV-infection status (see following section). The estimation of smear-positive TB incidence was discontinued in
2010, for reasons explained in detail in the global report
published in 2010.

4. Estimates of HIV prevalence among


incident TB cases, 19902010
The prevalence of HIV among incident cases of TB was
directly estimated from country-specic and empirical
data wherever possible. For the estimates published in
this report, suitable data (as de ned in Table A1.3) were
available for a total of 544 country-year data points, up
from 440 country-year data points in the previous year.
For the 3905 country-year data points for which surveillance data were either not available or for which the

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

81

TABLE A1.3

Source of data on HIV prevalence among incident TB cases


DIRECT MEASUREMENT OF THE PREVALENCE
OF HIV IN TB PATIENTS

NUMBER OF
COUNTRY-YEARS

National surveys

31

HIV sentinel surveillance

30

Provider-initiated testing and counselling


with at least 50% coverage of testing

483

Total

544

percentage of TB patients tested for HIV was below 50%,


the prevalence of HIV was estimated indirectly according
to the following equation:
t=

hl
l + h(l l)

In this equation, t is HIV prevalence among incident TB


cases, h is HIV prevalence among the general population
(from the latest time-series provided by UNAIDS) and
l is the incidence rate ratio (IRR) (de ned as the incidence rate of TB in HIV-positive people divided by the
incidence rate of TB in HIV-negative people).1 We then
let logit(t) be log(t/(1-t)) and logit(h) be log(h/(1-h)). Using
data from countries where HIV prevalence has been estimated by UNAIDS as an independent variable, a linear
model of logit-transformed t was tted using logit-transformed h according to the following equation, written in
matrix notation:
T = X`
where T is a vector of predicted logit(t), X is an n x 2
matrix in which the rst column holds 1s, and the second column holds logit(h). The vector ` holds estimated
model parameters.
Models were run using Monte Carlo simulations in
which h was drawn randomly from a Beta distribution
with shape parameters computed as described in section 3.1, (low and high uncertainty bounds are provided
by UNAIDS also see Table A1.2). The model was run
50 000 times using country-specic distributions for H
and T (noted in capital letters to denote vectors or matrices) based on their uncertainty intervals. The uncertainty bounds for ` were chosen as the 2.5th and 97.5th
centiles.
The source of data used for each country is available
upon request from tbdata@who.int.

5. Estimates of TB prevalence, 19902010


The best way to measure the prevalence of TB is through
national population-based surveys of TB disease.2,3 Data
from such surveys are available for an increasing number of countries (Chapter 2). It should be noted, however,
that measurements of prevalence are typically con ned
to the adult population. Furthermore, prevalence surveys

82

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

exclude extrapulmonary cases and do not allow the diagnosis of cases of culture-negative pulmonary TB.
When there is no direct measurement from a national survey of the prevalence of TB disease, prevalence is
the most uncertain of the three TB indicators used to
measure disease burden. This is because prevalence is
the product of two uncertain quantities: (i) incidence and
(ii) disease duration. The duration of disease is very difcult to quantify because it cannot be measured during
surveys of the prevalence of TB disease (surveys truncate
the natural history of disease). Duration can be assessed
in self-presenting patients, but there is no practical way
to measure the duration of disease in patients who are
not notied to NTPs.
Indirect estimates of prevalence were calculated
according to the following equation:
P=

- Ii,jd i,j, iD {1,2}, jD {1,2}

where the index variable i denotes HIV+ and HIV, the


index variable j denotes notied and non-notied cases,
d denotes the duration of disease in notied cases and I
is total incidence. In the absence of measurements, we
did not allow duration in notied cases to vary among
countries. Given their underlying uncertainty, prevalence estimates should be used with great caution in the
absence of direct measurements from a prevalence survey. Unless measurements were available from national
programmes (for example, Turkey), assumptions of the
duration of disease were used as shown in the last four
rows of Table A1.2.

6. Estimates of the number of cases


of MDR-TB
6.1 Proportion of notied cases of TB that have
MDR-TB, 2010
Global and regional estimates of the proportion of new
and retreatment cases of TB that had MDR-TB in 2010
were calculated using country-level information. If countries had reported data on the proportion of new and
retreatment cases of TB that have MDR-TB from routine surveillance or a survey of drug resistance the latest available information was used. For countries that
have not reported such data, estimates of the proportion
of new and retreatment cases of TB that have MDRTB were produced using modelling (including multiple
imputation) that was based on data from countries for
which data do exist. Estimates for countries without
data were based on countries that were considered to be
1

www.unaids.org/en/dataanalysis/epidemiology/, accessed
15 July 2011.
Glaziou P et al. Tuberculosis prevalence surveys: rationale
and cost. International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease,
2008, 12(9):10031008.
TB prevalence surveys: a handbook. Geneva, World Health
Organization, 2011 (WHO/HTM/TB/2010.17).

similar in terms of TB epidemiology. The observed and


imputed estimates of the proportion of new and retreatment cases of TB that have MDR-TB were then pooled to
give a global estimate, with countries weighted according
to their share of global notications of new and retreatment cases.

include assessments of drug resistance. In the absence


of direct measurements at country level, country-specic estimates of the prevalence of MDR-TB suffer from
much greater uncertainty compared with the uncertainty
that surrounds global averages.

7. Estimates of TB mortality, 19902010


6.2 Trends in the proportion of new TB cases with
MDR-TB, 19942010
Analysis of trends in the proportion of TB cases that
have MDR-TB was restricted to new cases. Data were too
patchy to allow analysis of trends in retreatment cases.
Countries or territories for which there were at least
two measurements of the proportion of new TB cases
that had MDR-TB between 1994 and 2010 were identied. A linear regression model of the log-transformed
proportion of cases that have MDR-TB was tted for
every country, with only year as an independent variable. The restricting assumption of a linear association between changes in the proportion of cases that
have MDR-TB and time was made because of the small
number of measurements per country. The slope of
this regression model represents the annual change in
the proportion of new cases with MDR-TB. Modelling
including multiple imputation was then used to produce
estimates of the annual change in the proportion of cases
that have MDR-TB for countries that have not reported
data. Estimates for countries without data were based on
countries to which they were considered to be similar in
terms of TB epidemiology (see Appendix 1 and section
2.2). Finally, the observed and imputed estimates were
pooled to give global and regional estimates, with countries weighted according to their share of global notications of new cases.

6.3 Numbers of prevalent cases of MDR-TB, 2010


The global estimate of the number of prevalent cases
of MDR-TB in 2010 was derived in two steps. First, the
weighted average of the proportion of new and retreatment notied cases that had MDR-TB was computed, to
give an estimate of the proportion of all notied cases
that had MDR-TB. This combined proportion was then
multiplied by the estimated global prevalence of TB in
the general population, under the assumption that the
proportion of all cases that have MDR-TB was the same
as the proportion of notied cases that have MDR-TB.
Country-specic estimates of the number of prevalent cases of MDR-TB in 2010 were not computed
because only a few countries have directly measured
the prevalence of TB in a population-based survey, and
even among these countries data on the proportion of
culture-positive pulmonary cases that had MDR-TB are
not always available. To date, direct measurements of
the number of prevalent cases of MDR-TB are available
only for China, although several upcoming surveys will

The best sources of data about deaths from TB (excluding those among HIV-positive people) are VR systems
in which causes of death are coded according to ICD-10
(although the older ICD-9 and ICD-8 classication are
still in use in several countries). Deaths from TB in HIVpositive people are coded under HIV-associated codes.
Estimates of TB mortality were produced directly
from VR data or mortality surveys, or indirectly from
estimates of TB incidence and case-fatality rates (CFRs).
The source of data used in each country is available from
tbdata@who.int upon request.

7.1 Estimating TB mortality from vital registration


data and mortality surveys
Data from VR systems are reported to WHO by Member
States and territories every year. In countries with functioning VR systems in which causes of death are coded
according to the two latest revisions of the international classication of diseases (underlying cause of death:
ICD-10 A15-A19, equivalent to ICD-9: 010-018), VR data
are the best source of information about deaths from
TB among people not infected with HIV. When people
with AIDS die from TB, HIV is registered as the underlying cause of death and TB is recorded as a contributory cause. Since one third of countries with VR systems
report to WHO only the underlying causes of death and
not contributory causes, VR data usually cannot be used
to estimate the number of TB deaths in HIV-positive
people.
In 2010, 92 countries had well-functioning VR systems according to the following de nition: (i) coverage of
at least 70% of the population, and (ii) ill-de ned causes
of death (ICD-9 code B46, ICD-10 codes R00-R99) of
<20% of all registered deaths.1 In addition, mortality survey data from two countries were used (China and India),
of which one (India) did not have VR data. Countries
with mortality measurements included 6 of the 22 HBCs
(Brazil, China, India, the Philippines, the Russian Federation and South Africa). However, we could not use the
VR data on TB deaths from South Africa because large
numbers of HIV deaths were miscoded as TB deaths.
Among the remaining 91 countries, there was a median of 9 years (interquartile range, 611) of VR data on TB
mortality between 1991 and 2010 that met the above criteria, equivalent to 720 country-years. We assumed that
1

Mathers CD et al. Counting the dead and what they died


from: an assessment of the global status of cause of death
data. Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 2005, 83:171177.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

83

the proportion of TB deaths among deaths not recorded


by the VR system was the same as the proportion of TB
deaths in VR-recorded deaths. For VR-recorded deaths
with ill-de ned causes, we assumed that the proportion
of deaths attributable to TB was the same as the observed
proportion in recorded deaths. We assumed errors in
measurement (due to misclassications) and assumptions (redistributions) to be binomially distributed.

TABLE A1.4

Estimates of TB case-fatality rates by case type and


country
HIV-NEGATIVE

y = (I N )`1 + N`2 + , ~ N(0,m2 )


where y is TB mortality from VR, I denotes TB incidence
excluding people living with HIV, N denotes TB notications excluding people living with HIV, and parameters
`1 and `2 denote the CFR in non-notied and notied
cases respectively. Semi-conjugate priors were set with
an uninformative inverse Gamma prior on the conditional error variance:

POSTERIOR
DISTRIBUTIONS MEAN
(STANDARD ERROR)

Non-notied: highincome countries

0.1 (0.01)

0.1 (0.0097)

Non-notied: other
countries

0.4 (0.01)

0.32 (0.098)

Notied: high income


countries

0.04 (0.01)

0.074 (0.0026)

Notied: other countries

0.05 (0.01)

0.058 (0.006)

CASE TYPE AND


COUNTRY GROUP

7.2 Estimating TB mortality from indirect estimates


of case-fatality rates and TB incidence
For the years in which VR or mortality survey data of
sufcient quality and coverage were not available for the
91 countries de ned above plus the 125 countries (as of
2010) without any direct measurement, mortality was
estimated as the product of TB incidence and the CFR.
CFRs were estimated separately for TB cases notied
to NTPs and non-notied cases and, within these two
groups, separate estimates were made for HIV-positive
TB cases and HIV-negative TB cases (Table A1.3).
For consistency with VR or survey-based mortality
estimates, CFRs were estimated such that they gave the
best t to the directly measured TB death rates (within
their uncertainty ranges) across the 720 country-years of
data from the 91 countries with functioning VR systems
or survey data), in conjunction with WHO estimates of
distributions of TB incidence in those countries. This
statistical tting used Bayesian linear models and was
done separately for two groups of countries (high-income
and all other countries), to account for differences in the
ratio of reported TB mortality to TB notication rates
among these two groups (data not shown).
The models used normal errors and Gibbs sampling:

NORMAL PRIOR
DISTRIBUTIONSa MEAN
(STANDARD ERROR)

Priors and assumed distributions in HIV-negaitive cases were derived from (i)
pooled estimates from random-effects modelling of literature review results
and (ii) pooled estimates from the WHO global TB database of assumed
country-specic CFRs (2008).

7.3 Estimates of TB mortality among


HIV-positive people
A prior belief about the proportion of HIV deaths with
TB as the contributory cause of death was set on the
assumption of a beta distribution with parameters a and
b. The prior proportion was set at 30% (standard deviation, 3%).3 The likelihood for the estimated number
of TB deaths among estimated HIV-positive incident
TB cases was based on an assumed 50% CFR (standard deviation, 5%) in low and middle-income countries
and a 20% CFR (standard deviation, 2%) in high-income
countries, using the methods described above and from
literature reviews.4 Cases on antiretroviral therapy (ART)
were assumed to benet from the protective effect of ART,
estimated at 48% (standard deviation, 0.45%) based on a
recent literature review. The likelihood was de ned as a
beta density with parameters s+1 and f+1. By combining
the beta prior with the likelihood function, the posterior
is also of the beta form with parameters a+s and b+f. Posteriors were determined for each country-year data point.

7.4 Estimating TB mortality from disaggregated


estimates of TB deaths by age and sex
For countries with VR data, it was possible to disaggregate estimated TB deaths by age (with age groups de ned

b ~ N(b i ,B i-2 ), m2 ~ IG (5.10 -4,5.10 -4 )


Priors b and their precision B were de ned based on
literature reviews,1,2 and the country-year CFR parameters used by WHO for the years 19992008 (Table A1.4).
Convergence of Markov Chains was assessed graphically
and using two convergence diagnostic tests. Within each
case category 19902010, mortality estimates were computed by taking the product of posterior distributions of
the CFR, assumed to be time-independent (Table A1.4),
and country-year specic distributions of estimated incidence.

84

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Straetemans M et al. Assessing tuberculosis case fatality ratio:


a meta-analysis. PLoS One. 2011, 6(6):e20755.
Tiemersma EW et al. Natural history of tuberculosis: duration and fatality of untreated pulmonary tuberculosis in
HIV negative patients: a systematic review. PLoS One. 2011,
6(4):e17601.
www.unaids.org/en/dataanalysis/epidemiology/ accessed
15 July 2011.
Straetemans M et al. The effect of tuberculosis on mortality in HIV positive people: a meta-analysis. PLoS One, 2010,
5(12):e15241.

as 04 years, 514 years, 1524 years, 2534 years, 3544


years, 4554 years, 5564 years, *65 years) and sex, in
line with the way in which deaths are reported. In countries with no functional VR system, the total number of
estimated TB deaths was redistributed into the different
age and sex strata according to the disaggregation of the
combined population of countries with VR data (with
standardization against the individual countrys age and
sex distribution). TB deaths in HIV-positive people were
not disaggregated by age and sex due to limited data from
countries with functional VR systems.

8. Projections of incidence, prevalence and


mortality up to 2015
Projections of TB incidence, prevalence and mortality
rates up to 2015 enable assessment of whether global
targets set for 2015 are likely to be achieved at global,
regional and country levels. Projections for the years
20112015 were made using log-linear regression models tted to data from 20072010, with the assumption
that recent trends would continue.

9. Estimation of uncertainty
There are many potential sources of uncertainty associated with estimates of TB incidence, prevalence and
mortality, as well as estimates of the burden of HIV-associated TB and MDR-TB. These include uncertainties in
input data, in parameter values, in extrapolations used to
impute missing data, and in the models used.
We used xed population values from the UNPD. We
did not account for any uncertainty in these values.
Notication data are of uneven quality. Cases may be
underreported (missing quarterly reports from remote
administrative areas are not uncommon), misclassied
(in particular, misclassication of recurrent cases in the
category of new cases is common), or over-reported as a
result of duplicated entries in TB information systems.
The latter two issues can only be addressed efciently in
countries with case-based nationwide TB databases that
include patient identiers. Sudden changes in notications
over time are often the result of errors or inconsistencies
in reporting, but may sometimes reect abrupt changes
in TB epidemiology (for example, resulting from a rapid
inux of migrants from countries with a high burden of
TB, or from rapid improvement in case-nding efforts).
Missing national aggregates of new and recurrent
cases were imputed by cubic spline interpolation. Notication trajectories were smoothed using a penalized
cubic splines function with parameters based on the
data. Attempts to obtain corrections for historical data
are made every year, but only rarely do countries provide
appropriate data corrections.
Mortality estimates incorporated the following sources of uncertainty: sampling uncertainty in the underlying
measurements of TB mortality rates from data sources,

uncertainty in estimates of incidence rates and rates of


HIV prevalence among both incident and notied TB
cases, and parameter uncertainty in the Bayesian model. Time-series of TB mortality were generated for each
country through Monte Carlo simulations.
Unless otherwise specied, uncertainty bounds and
ranges were de ned as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of
outcome distributions. Throughout this report, ranges
with upper and lower bounds de ned by these centiles
are provided for all estimates established with the use of
simulations. When uncertainty was established with the
use of observed or other empirical data, 95% condence
intervals are reported.
The model used the following sequence: (1) incidence
estimation, (2) estimation of HIV-positive TB incidence,
(3) estimation of mortality, (4) estimation of prevalence.
By design, some steps were independent from each other
(for example, step 4 may be done before or after step 3).
The general approach to uncertainty analyses was to
draw values from specied distributions for every parameter (except for notications and population values) in
Monte Carlo simulations, with the number of simulation runs set so that they were sufcient to ensure stability in the outcome distributions. For each country, the
same random generator seed was used for every year, and
errors were assumed to be time-dependent within countries (thus generating autocorrelation in time-series).
Regional parameters were used in some instances (for
example, for CFRs). Summaries of quantities of interest
were obtained by extracting the 2.5th, 50th and 97.5th
centiles of posterior distributions.

Appendix 1.
Epidemiological regions used for analyses
related to MDR-TB
Africa countries with high HIV prevalence: Botswana, Burundi, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, the Congo, Cte dIvoire, the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, Ethiopia, Gabon, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi,
Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa,
Swaziland, Uganda, the United Republic of Tanzania,
Zambia, Zimbabwe.
Africa countries with low HIV prevalence: Algeria, Angola, Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Chad, the
Comoros, Eritrea, the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, GuineaBissau, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius,
the Niger, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Seychelles,
Sierra Leone, Togo.
Central Europe: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Montenegro, Poland, Serbia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Turkey.
Eastern Europe: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bulgaria, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania,

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

85

the Republic of Moldova, Romania, the Russian Federation, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan.
High-income countries: Andorra, Australia, Austria,
the Bahamas, Bahrain, Barbados, Belgium, Bermuda,
Brunei Darussalam, Canada, the Cayman Islands, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Equatorial
Guinea, Estonia, Finland, France, French Polynesia,
Germany, Greece, Guam, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland,
Israel, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco,
the Netherlands, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Northern Mariana Islands, Norway, Oman, Portugal, Puerto
Rico, Qatar, the Republic of Korea, San Marino, Saudi
Arabia, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden,

86

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Switzerland, Trinidad and Tobago, the Turks and Caicos


Islands, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom,
the United States, US Virgin Islands.
Latin America: Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Aruba, Belize, Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Brazil, British Virgin Islands, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica,
Cuba, Curaao, Dominica, the Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana,
Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Montserrat, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Saint Kitts and Nevis,
Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Sint
Maarten (Dutch part), Suriname, Uruguay, Venezuela.
(Bolivarian Republic of).

ANNEX 2

Country proles
proles

Countries
This annex presents TB pro les for the 22 high burden countries that account for approximately 80% of all new TB
cases arising each year.
TB pro les for all countries and NTP nancing pro les for over 100 countries are available at www.who.int/tb/data.

Data source
Data shown in this annex are taken from the WHO global TB database on 2 September 2011. Data shown in the main
part of the report were taken from the database on 21 June 2011.
Notication data were updated by Bangladesh, the Russian Federation and South Africa between 21 June and
2 September 2011. As a result, their notication data in this annex differ slightly from those presented in the main part
of the report.

88

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

AFGHANISTAN
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
12 (8.616)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
110 (51180)
Incidence (incl HIV)
59 (4971)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
Case detection, all forms (%)
47 (3957)

31
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

38 (2750)
352 (162578)
189 (155226)

200
100
0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

12 947
4 479
2 606
6 248
633
26 913
642

(48)
(17)
(10)
(23)
(2)

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

1 116 (84)
147 (11)
62 (5)

Total retreatment

1 325

1995

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
600
400
200

28 029
28 238

0
1990

(99% of total)

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
80

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

No
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

86

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

60

20
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

40

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

5 170
18
0
0

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
6.1 (3.510)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
8.3 (1.721)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 300 (7202 100)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
110 (23280)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

New

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

238
<1
13

34
3
6

272
<1
19
0

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)

1.9
0
0

1.9
0.2
0

1.9
0.6
0

Retreatment

Outside country
Yes

Total

2010

2011

2012

9
5
58
7
69

11
9
81
4
53

20

10

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

89

BANGLADESH
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
149
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
Rate
2010a
(thousands)
(per 100 000 pop)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
64 (4785)
43 (3257)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
610 (2801 000)
411 (188671)
Incidence (incl HIV)
330 (270400)
225 (184269)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
0.66 (0.331.1) 0.45 (0.230.74)
Case detection, all forms (%)
46 (3856)
CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010
New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

105 772 (70)


21 625 (14)
0 (0)
23 506 (16)
0 (0)
150 903
4 235

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

2 989 (38)
961 (12)
594 (8)
3 251 (42)

Total retreatment

7 795

300
200
100
0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
800

400

0
1990

(97% of total)

153 892
158 698

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
80

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

92
89
81

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75

50
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

40

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

1 778
1
4
<1
100
0
347
64

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

50

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
2.1 (1.72.5)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
28 (2532)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
2 700 (2 2003 200)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
2 200 (1 9002 500)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

90

New

Retreatment

Total

339
4
339

339
<1
339
339

2009

2010

2011

0.7
<0.1
<0.1

0.7
0.1
<0.1

0.7
0.1
<0.1

Outside country
Yes

25

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

41
12
29
10
57

48
14
28
9
75

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


50

25

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

BRAZIL
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
2010a
Mortality (excluding HIV)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
Incidence (incl HIV)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
Case detection, all forms (%)

195
Number
(thousands)

Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

5 (3.18.3)
92 (34160)
85 (70100)
18 (15-22)
88 (74110)

2.6 (1.64.3)
47 (1780)
43 (3651)
9.3 (7.711)

120
80
40
0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

37 932
13 694
9 336
10 017
18
70 997
2 450

(53)
(19)
(13)
(14)
(<1)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

3 398 (31)
122 (1)
3 208 (29)
4 221 (39)

Total retreatment

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

10 949

74 395
81 946

1995

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
200

100

0
1990

(91% of total)

2000

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
15

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
100
No

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

72
68
42

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75
50
25
0
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

10
5
0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

37 210
45
8 558
23
93

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

10000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
0.90 (0.601.4)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
5.4 (3.97.3)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
550 (370850)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
590 (450800)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

5000

0
2003

New

Retreatment

Total

22
<1
21

643
6
552

665
<1
573
573

2009

2010

2011

2.1
5.8
1.1

2.0
6.5
1.0

2.0
6.9
1.1

In and outside country


Yes

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

87
80
92
90
5

87
74
85
97
1

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


100

50

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

91

CAMBODIA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
2010a
Mortality (excluding HIV)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
Incidence (incl HIV)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
Case detection, all forms (%)

14
Number
(thousands)

Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

8.6 (6.212)
93 (42150)
62 (5372)
4 (3.44.7)
65 (5777)

61 (4482)
660 (2961070)
437 (373506)
29 (2433)

600
400
200
0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

17 454 (44)
8 301 (21)
0 (0)
14 239 (36)
0 (0)
39 994
99

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

466 (29)
59 (4)
19 (1)
1 090 (67)

Total retreatment

1 634

40 460
41 628

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

1995

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
2000

1000

0
1990

(97% of total)

2000

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
200

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

95
93
79

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

90
80
70
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

100

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

32 236
77
2 112
7
65
45
491

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

6000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
1.4 (0.702.5)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
11 (4.022)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
360 (180640)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
170 (65360)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

92

New

Retreatment

Total

5
<1
1

93
6
30

98
<1
31
38

2009

2010

2011

1.5
1.1
0.4

1.5
1.1
0.4

1.5
1.0
0.3

Outside country
Yes

4000

2000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

39
14
35
8
36

40
15
36
8
31

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


50

25

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

CHINA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
1 341
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
Rate
2010a
(thousands)
(per 100 000 pop)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
54 (5256)
4.1 (3.94.2)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
1 500 (1 3001 700) 108 (93123)
Incidence (incl HIV)
1 000 (9101 200)
78 (6888)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
18 (1028)
1.4 (0.772.1)
Case detection, all forms (%)
87 (77100)
CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010
New cases

(%)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Smear-positive 429 899 (49)


Smear-negative 430 580 (50)
Smear unknown
2 288 (<1)
Extrapulmonary
6 325 (<1)
Other
0 (0)
Total new
869 092
Total < 15 years
6 710

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

39 307 (73)
2 662 (5)
1 103 (2)
11 144 (21)

Total retreatment

54 216

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

908 399
923 308

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)
150
100
50
0
1990

1995

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
200

100

0
1990

(98% of total)

2000

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
20

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
15
No

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

95
92
90

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

90

80
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

145 919
16
4 542
3
45
65 412

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
5.7 (4.67.1)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
26 (2230)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
49 000 (40 00061 000)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
14 000 (12 00016 000)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment

10

4000

2000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

New

Retreatment

Total

229

1 669

2 792
1 222

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)

2009

2010

2011

0.2
3.1
0.5

0.2
3.3
0.7

0.2
2.7
0.8

2010

2011

2012

285
278
98
70
30

350
319
91
69
30

350

250

Second-line DST available


National Reference Laboratory
a

In country
Yes

150
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

93

DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO


POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
36 (2745)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
350 (160560)
Incidence (incl HIV)
220 (190250)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
18 (1324)
Case detection, all forms (%)
53 (4661)

66
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

54 (4169)
535 (250850)
327 (281376)
27 (1936)

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

73 653 (67)
14 039 (13)
0 (0)
22 340 (20)
0 (0)
110 032
3 694

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

0
1990

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

4 138 (48)
713 (8)
796 (9)
2 957 (34)

Total retreatment

8 604

Yes
100
Yes

88
86
77

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

50

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)

New

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
1000

500

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)

40

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

28 997
24
5 273
18
24
9
3 892

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
2.2 (0.105.3)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
9.4 (1.917)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 900 (884 600)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
810 (1601 500)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment

2000

80

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

100

1995

0
1990

(96% of total)

114 170
118 636

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

0
1995

400

200

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

Retreatment

Total

100
1
87

100
<1
87
191

2009

2010

2011

2.2
<0.1
<0.1

2.2
<0.1
<0.1

2.2
0.1
0.1

5000

2500

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

64
<1
1
0
0

62

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


75

50

25

Second-line DST available


National Reference Laboratory
a

94

No
Yes

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

ETHIOPIA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
29 (2335)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
330 (140520)
Incidence (incl HIV)
220 (200230)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
Case detection, all forms (%)
72 (6678)

83
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

35 (2842)
394 (173623)
261 (240282)

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

46 634 (31)
52 457 (35)
2 522 (2)
50 417 (33)
0 (0)
152 030
3 190

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

100
0
1990

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

2 664
493
777
964

Total retreatment

4 898

(54)
(10)
(16)
(20)

154 694
156 928

(99% of total)

Yes
100
Yes

84
80
67

90

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

70

2001

2003

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

600
400

2005

2007

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
40

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)

1999

2000

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)

0
1990

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

1997

1995

200

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

50
1995

300
200

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

20

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

66 955
43
9 809
15
69
39
43 837
6 636

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

12000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
1.6 (0.902.8)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
12 (5.621)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 600 (9102 800)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
580 (2701 000)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)

New

Retreatment

Total

42
<1
19

510
10
121

558
<1
140
120

2009

2010

2011

1.5
0.1
0.1

2.3
0.1
0.1

2.8
0.4
0.1

8000

4000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

49
40
83
20
40

52
38
74
23
39

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


60

40

20

Second-line DST available


National Reference Laboratory
a

In country
Yes

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

95

INDIA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
1 225
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
Rate
2010a
(thousands)
(per 100 000 pop)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
320 (210470)
26 (1739)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
3 100 (2 0004 600) 256 (161373)
Incidence (incl HIV)
2 300 (2 0002 500) 185 (167205)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
110 (75160)
9.2 (6.113)
Case detection, all forms (%)
59 (5365)
CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010
New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
630 165
Smear-negative 366 381
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary 231 121
Other
1 508
Total new
1 229 175
Total < 15 years
13 415

Retreatment cases

(51)
(30)
(19)
(<1)

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

110 691 (38)


18 463 (6)
72 110 (25)
91 708 (31)

Total retreatment

292 972

1 339 866
1 522 147

Yes
0
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

88
90
75

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)

0
1995

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

96

New

0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
400
200

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)

20
0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

480 752
32
41 476
9
90
57
199 732

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
2.1 (1.52.7)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
15 (1317)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
21 000 (15 00027 000)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
43 000 (39 00048 000)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment

100

40

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

50

200

0
1990

(88% of total)

100

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

Retreatment

40000

20000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2 967
2 967

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)

Total

2009

2010

2011

1.1
<0.1
<0.1

1.1
<0.1
<0.1

1.0
0.1
0.1

In country
Yes

2010

2011

2012

139
139
100
44
49

210
210
100
62
38

250

150

50
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals. Estimates for India have not yet been ofcially
approved by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India and should
therefore be considered provisional.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

INDONESIA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
240
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
Rate
2010a
(thousands)
(per 100 000 pop)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
64 (4291)
27 (1838)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
690 (3001 200) 289 (123484)
Incidence (incl HIV)
450 (370540)
189 (155226)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
18 (9.929)
7.6 (4.112)
Case detection, all forms (%)
66 (5581)
CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010
New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

183 366 (62)


101 247 (34)
0 (0)
11 659 (4)
0 (0)
296 272
28 312

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

4 387 (67)
327 (5)
862 (13)
1 013 (15)

Total retreatment

6 589

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

91
87
72

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75
50
25
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

100
0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
800

400

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)

40

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

3 217

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
1.8 (1.12.7)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
17 (8.126)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
5 100 (3 1007 700)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 100 (5301 700)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment

200

0
1990

(99% of total)

300 659
302 861

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

New

Retreatment

Total

0
0
0

324
5
182

324
<1
182
142

2009

2010

2011

2.2
0.9
0.1

2.1
0.9
0.1

2.9
0.9
0.2

In country
Yes

3000
2000
1000
0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

91
43
48
31
68

102
63
62
26
74

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


125

75

25
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

97

KENYA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
6.9 (4.99.4)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
110 (49180)
Incidence (incl HIV)
120 (120130)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
50 (4555)
Case detection, all forms (%)
82 (7986)

41
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

17 (1223)
283 (122448)
298 (286311)
122 (110135)

200

0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

36 260
31 842
10 120
17 382
0
95 604
5 721

(38)
(33)
(11)
(18)
(0)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

3 668 (35)
245 (2)
1 502 (14)
5 064 (48)

Total retreatment

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

10 479

99 272
106 083

1995

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
500

200

0
1990

(94% of total)

2000

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
30

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

86
82
78

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75

50
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

20
10
0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

96 930
91
40 069
41
100
48

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

60000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
0.0 (0.00.70)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
0.0 (0.06.3)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
0 (0550)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
0 (0660)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)

New

40000

20000

0
2003

Retreatment

Total

706
7
103

817
<1
112
118

2009

2010

2011

3.0
0.8
0.5

3.3
0.7
0.5

3.2
0.7
0.6

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

59
30
51
37
49

53
20
38
39
59

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


75

50

25

Second-line DST available


National Reference Laboratory
a

98

Outside country
Yes

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

MOZAMBIQUE
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
11 (717)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
110 (54200)
Incidence (incl HIV)
130 (87170)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
77 (53110)
Case detection, all forms (%)
34 (2550)

23
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

1000

49 (3074)
491 (233844)
544 (374746)
330 (228449)

500

0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

20 097 (48)
16 408 (39)
0 (0)
5 621 (13)
0 (0)
42 126

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

1 432 (35)
234 (6)
235 (6)
2 147 (53)

Total retreatment

4 048

43 558
46 174

1995

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
2000

1000

0
1990

(94% of total)

2000

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
200

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
95
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

85

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75
50
25
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

100

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

40 554
88
24 574
61
97
25
433
8 904

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

30000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
3.5 (2.24.8)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
11 (0.025)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 300 (8001 800)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
450 (01 000)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

New

Retreatment

Total

80
<1
18

251
6
130

365
<1
165
87

2009

2010

2011

1.9
0.2
0.2

1.9
0.4
0.4

1.8
0.6
0.6

Outside country
Yes

20000

10000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

34
24
71
11
0

39
24
62
11
12

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


50

25

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

99

MYANMAR
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
20 (1231)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
250 (180310)
Incidence (incl HIV)
180 (160210)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
37 (2157)
Case detection, all forms (%)
71 (6284)

48
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

41 (2564)
525 (381643)
384 (329443)
77 (43120)

400

200
0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

42 318 (33)
56 840 (45)
27 976 (22)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

4 456 (43)
1 495 (15)
514 (5)
3 804 (37)

Total retreatment

10 269

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

1500
1000

Yes
100
Yes

85
83
73

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75

2001

2003

2005

2007

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
120

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

1999

2000

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)

0
1990

(96% of total)

131 590
137 403

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

1997

1995

500

127 134
302

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

50
1995

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

80
40
0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

4 362
3
961
22
100
94
6 417
514

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

6000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
4.2 (3.15.6)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
10 (6.914)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
4 200 (3 1005 600)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 000 (7101 400)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

100

New

Retreatment

Total

192
192
2009

2010

2011

0.9
0.2
0.2

0.9
0.2
0.2

0.9
0.3
0.2

Outside country
Yes

4000

2000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

31
14
45
4
46

29
11
37
6
75

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


40

20

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

NIGERIA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
33 (1168)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
320 (110690)
Incidence (incl HIV)
210 (99360)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
51 (2587)
Case detection, all forms (%)
40 (2385)

158
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

21 (7.243)
199 (70438)
133 (63228)
32 (1655)

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

45 416 (56)
32 616 (40)
0 (0)
3 422 (4)
0 (0)
81 454
1 116

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

600
400
200
0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

2 667 (30)
748 (8)
1 650 (18)
3 928 (44)

Total retreatment

8 993

84 121
90 447

1995

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
1000

500

0
1990

(93% of total)

2000

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
120

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

80

No
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

83
85
81

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75
50
25
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

40
0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

71 844
79
17 736
25
59
33
57 082
1 750

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

20000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
2.2 (0.105.3)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
9.4 (1.917)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 700 (784 100)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
850 (1701 500)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)

New

Retreatment

Total

27
<1
8

19
<1
11

55
<1
21
23

2009

2010

2011

0.7
0.1
<0.1

0.6
0.2
0.1

0.9
0.2
0.2

10000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

39
28
73
21
54

43
26
61
25
48

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


70

50

30

Second-line DST available


National Reference Laboratory
a

Outside country
Yes

10
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

101

PAKISTAN
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
174
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
Rate
2010a
(thousands)
(per 100 000 pop)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
58 (3984)
34 (2249)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
630 (2701 100)
364 (154611)
Incidence (incl HIV)
400 (330480)
231 (189277)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
1.2 (0.661.9)
0.69 (0.381.1)
Case detection, all forms (%)
65 (5479)
CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010
New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

104 263 (41)


105 623 (41)
0 (0)
45 443 (18)
0 (0)
255 329
24 474

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

5 870 (54)
1 003 (9)
1 527 (14)
2 525 (23)

Total retreatment

10 925

261 199
269 290

No
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

91
90
82

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)

0
1995

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

200
100
0
1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
1000

500

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)

80

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

50

300

0
1990

(97% of total)

100

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

40

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

6 289
2
22
<1
9

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

40

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
3.4 (0.806.0)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
21 (7.334)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
7 100 (1 70013 000)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
2 300 (8003 700)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)

New

Retreatment

Total

9
<1
9

306
3
306

444
<1
444
424

2009

2010

2011

0.7
0.4
0.3

0.7
0.4
0.3

0.7
0.4
0.3

20

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

60
13
22
34
41

64
11
18
25
50

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


75

50

25

Second-line DST available


National Reference Laboratory
a

102

In country
Yes

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

PHILIPPINES
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
31 (2143)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
470 (410530)
Incidence (incl HIV)
260 (210310)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
1 (0.511.8)
Case detection, all forms (%)
65 (5479)

93
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

33 (2246)
502 (438566)
275 (226329)
1.1 (0.551.9)

400
200
0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

89 198 (55)
72 440 (44)
0 (0)
1 610 (<1)
0 (0)
163 248
965

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

3 075 (28)
566 (5)
914 (8)
6 586 (59)

1995

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
1200
800
400

Total retreatment

11 141

166 323
174 389

0
1990

(95% of total)

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
60

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

89
79
61

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


100

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

60

20
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

40
20
0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

1 356
<1
0
0

119
16

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

1.2

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
4.0 (2.95.5)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
21 (1429)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
6 500 (4 7008 900)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
2 300 (1 6003 200)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

New

Retreatment

Total

3
<1
2

297
3
232

300
<1
522
548

2009

2010

2011

2.2
0.5
0.2

2.1
0.4
0.1

2.1
1.4
0.2

In country
Yes

0.8

0.4

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

81
55
67
55
42

79
48
60
51
49

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


100

50

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

103

RUSSIAN FEDERATION
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
26 (1642)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
190 (70330)
Incidence (incl HIV)
150 (130180)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
8.1 (6.89.4)
Case detection, all forms (%)
78 (6793)

143
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

150

18 (1129)
136 (49233)
106 (90124)
5.7 (4.86.6)

100
50
0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

31 416 (29)
66 595 (61)
1 299 (1)
3 513 (3)
7 081 (6)
109 904
831

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
8 737 (19)
Treatment after failure
8 197 (18)
Treatment after default 2 897 (6)
Other
26 149 (57)
Total retreatment

45 980

118 641
162 553

Yes
No

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

55
73
34

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

70
50

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
400

200

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)

40

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

199 445
123
10 617
5
82

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
18 (1619)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
46 (4152)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
19 000 (17 00020 000)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
21 000 (19 00024 000)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment

1995

0
1990

(73% of total)

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

30
1995

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

10000

5000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

New

Retreatment

Total

35 862
33
6 218

13 405
29
6 169

49 267
30
13 692
13 692

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2011

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)

2009

2010

2.8
13.9
9.5

2.8
13.9
9.5

2010

2011

2012

1 216
1 216
100
100
0

1 204
1 204
100
100
0

1200

700

Second-line DST available


National Reference Laboratory
a

104

In country
No

200
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

SOUTH AFRICA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
25 (1638)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
400 (180630)
Incidence (incl HIV)
490 (400590)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
300 (240350)
Case detection, all forms (%)
72 (6088)

50
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

50 (3175)
795 (3641 264)
981 (8061 173)
591 (488704)

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

132 107
64 692
87 080
52 095
0
335 974
50 474

(39)
(19)
(26)
(16)
(0)

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
18 812 (31)
Treatment after failure
2 671 (4)
Treatment after default 4 921 (8)
Other
34 176 (56)

500

1995

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
1200
800
400

Total retreatment

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

1000

0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

60 580

354 786
396 554

0
1990

(89% of total)

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
80

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

73
64
60

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


80

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

60

40
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

40

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

213 006
54
128 457
60
74
54
758 837
124 049

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

150000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
1.8 (1.42.3)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
6.7 (5.48.2)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
5 100 (4 0006 500)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
4 100 (3 3005 000)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

New

Retreatment

50000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

92 300
23
7 386
5 402

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)

Total

2009

2010

2011

0.5
1.6
1.6

0.5
1.5
1.5

0.5
1.5
1.5

In country
Yes

100000

2011

2010

2012

218
218
100
100
0

400

200

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

105

THAILAND
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
11 (716)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
130 (55210)
Incidence (incl HIV)
94 (78110)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
15 (1318)
Case detection, all forms (%)
70 (5985)

69
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

16 (1023)
182 (80300)
137 (112163)
22 (1827)

100

0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

33 450 (52)
20 927 (32)
10 135 (16)
0 (0)
64 512
137

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

1 885 (63)
459 (15)
652 (22)
0 (0)

Total retreatment

2 996

66 397
68 239

Yes
25
No

86
80
68

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

80
60

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
400

200

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
30

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

100

1995

0
1990

(97% of total)

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

40
1995

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

20
10
0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

52 753
77
8 544
16
71
53
25 278

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

10000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
1.7 (1.02.6)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
35 (2842)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
920 (5401 400)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 000 (8401 200)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

106

New

Retreatment

Total

9
2009

2010

2011

1.6
4.7
1.1

1.6
4.7
1.1

1.6
4.7
1.2

In country
Yes

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

5000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

45
42
92
81
8

45
42
92
81
8

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


50

25

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

UGANDA
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
2010a
Mortality (excluding HIV)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
Incidence (incl HIV)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
Case detection, all forms (%)

33
Number
(thousands)

Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

5.1 (3.37.3)
64 (32100)
70 (5685)
38 (3046)
61 (5176)

15 (9.922)
193 (95306)
209 (168254)
112 (91136)

1000

500

0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

23 456 (56)
11 609 (28)
1 958 (5)
4 571 (11)
0 (0)
41 594
669

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

1 291 (33)
264 (7)
1 209 (31)
1 188 (30)

Total retreatment

3 952

42 885
45 546

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

Yes
100
Yes

67
59
70

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75
50

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
1000

500

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)

80

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

100

1995

0
1990

(94% of total)

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

25
1995

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

40

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

36 724
81
19 836
54
90
24
401 973

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

20000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
1.1 (0.302.5)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
12 (4.823)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
410 (110930)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
46 (190890)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)

10000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

New

Retreatment

Total

358
<1
15

356
9
37

1 623
4
93
10

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)

2009

2010

2011

2.6
0.9
0.6

2.9
1.2
0.6

2.8
1.2
0.6

2010

2011

2012

23
11
48
3
76

20
6
31
5
56

20

10

Second-line DST available


National Reference Laboratory
a

In country
Yes

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

107

UNITED REPUBLIC OF TANZANIA


POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
5.8 (4.76.9)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
82 (39130)
Incidence (incl HIV)
79 (7585)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
30 (2832)
Case detection, all forms (%)
77 (7282)

45
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

13 (1115)
183 (87281)
177 (166189)
67 (6271)

200

100

0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

Retreatment cases

(%)

24 769 (42)
21 184 (36)
0 (0)
13 715 (23)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

1 430 (38)
96 (3)
255 (7)
2 004 (53)

59 668
5 216

Total retreatment

3 785

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

61 098
63 453

1995

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)
400

200

0
1990

(96% of total)

2000

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)
40

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

Yes
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

88
88
83

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


90

New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

80

70
1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

108

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

56 849
90
21 662
38
92
35
321 436

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
1.1 (0.302.8)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
0.0 (0.05.9)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
510 (1401 300)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
0 (0220)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment

20

New

Retreatment

Total

201
<1
9

246
6
22

474
<1
34
17

2009

2010

2011

1.6
0.1
0.1

1.6
0.4
0.2

1.6
0.8
0.3

In and outside country


Yes

20000

10000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

39
19
48
36
30

42
19
46
38
27

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


60

30

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

VIET NAM
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
Number
2010a
(thousands)
Mortality (excluding HIV)
29 (1943)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
290 (130510)
Incidence (incl HIV)
180 (130220)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
7.6 (4.611)
Case detection, all forms (%)
54 (4371)

88
Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

34 (2149)
334 (147576)
199 (152253)
8.6 (5.213)

200

100

0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

52 145 (59)
18 237 (21)
0 (0)
17 651 (20)
0 (0)
88 033
112

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

6 834 (81)
595 (7)
385 (5)
594 (7)

Total retreatment

8 408

94 867
99 022

92
92
73

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

90
80

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)

400

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)

40

Yes
100
No

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

100

1995

0
1990

(96% of total)

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

70
1995

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

42 356
43
3 515
8
62
43
1 317

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

6000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
2.7 (2.03.7)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
19 (1425)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 900 (1 4002 600)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
1 600 (1 2002 100)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

New

Retreatment

Total

101
101
2009

2010

2011

0.9
1.3
0.1

0.9
1.3
0.1

0.9
1.4
0.1

In country
Yes

4000

2000

0
2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2010

2011

2012

59
18
31
26
66

74
15
20
31
62

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)


80

40

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

109

ZIMBABWE
POPULATION 2010 (MILLIONS)
ESTIMATES OF BURDEN
2010a
Mortality (excluding HIV)
Prevalence (incl HIV)
Incidence (incl HIV)
Incidence (HIV-positive)
Case detection, all forms (%)

13
Number
(thousands)

Rate
(per 100 000 pop)

3.4 (2.15.1)
51 (2380)
80 (61100)
60 (4776)
56 (4472)

27 (1740)
402 (185639)
633 (486799)
480 (371603)

800

400

0
1990

CASE NOTIFICATIONS 2010


New cases

(%)

Smear-positive
Smear-negative
Smear unknown
Extrapulmonary
Other
Total new
Total < 15 years

11 654
18 341
6 816
6 061
0
42 872
4 371

(27)
(43)
(16)
(14)
(0)

Total new and relapse


Total cases notied

Retreatment cases

(%)

Relapse
Treatment after failure
Treatment after default
Other

1 337 (29)
135 (3)
157 (3)
3 056 (65)

Total retreatment

4 685

44 209
47 557

78
74
80

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE (%)


New smear +
New smear /
extrapulmonary
Retreatment

50

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

2000

2005

2010

PREVALENCE
(rate per 100 000 population)

400

1995

MORTALITY EXCLUDING HIV


(rate per 100 000 population)

40

Yes
100
Yes

TREATMENT SUCCESS RATE 2009 (%)


New smear-positive
New smear-negative/extrapulmonary
Retreatment

75

1995

0
1990

(93% of total)

DRUG REGIMENS
Rifampicin used throughout treatment
% of patients treated with xed-dose combinations (FDCs)
Paediatric formulations procured

25
1995

INCIDENCE (HIV+TB red), notications (black)


(rates per 100 000 population)

20
0
1990

1995

TB/HIV 2010
TB patients with known HIV status
% of TB patients with known HIV status
TB patients that are HIV-positive
% of tested TB patients that are HIV-positive
% HIV-positive TB patients started on CPT
% HIV-positive TB patients started on ART
HIV-positive people screened for TB
HIV-positive people provided with IPT

38 012
80
28 662
75
18
30

CPT (pink) and ART (brown) for HIV-positive TB patients (blue)

2009

30000

MDR-TB, ESTIMATES AMONG NOTIFIED CASESa


% of new TB cases with MDR-TB
1.9 (1.03.3)
% of retreatment TB cases with MDR-TB
8.3 (1.823)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among new
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
700 (3701 200)
Estimated MDR-TB cases among retreated
pulmonary TB cases notied in 2010
390 (841 000)
MDR-TB REPORTED CASES 2010
Cases tested for MDR-TB
% of notied tested for MDR-TB
Conrmed cases of MDR-TB
MDR-TB patients started treatment
LABORATORIES
Smear (per 100 000 population)
Culture (per 5 million population)
DST (per 5 million population)
Second-line DST available
National Reference Laboratory
a

110

New

Retreatment

20000

10000

0
2003

Total

26
<1
17
27
2009

2010

2011

1.0
0.4
0.4

0.9
0.8
0.8

1.4
0.8
0.8

No
Yes

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

FINANCING
Total budget (US$ millions)
Available funding (US$ millions)
% of budget funded
% available funding from domestic sources
% available funding from Global Fund

2009

2011

2010

2012

26
6
24
5
79

NTP Budget (blue) and available funding (green) (US$ millions)

20

0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Ranges represent uncertainty intervals.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

ANNEX 3

Global, regional and


country-specicc data for
country-speci
key indicators
Summary by WHO region

113

African Region

121

Region of the Americas

145

Eastern Mediterranean Region

169

European Region

185

South-East Asian Region

213

Western Pacic Region

225

Summary by WHO region


Table A3.1 Estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB, 19902010

115

Table A3.2 Incidence, notication and case detection rates, all forms, 19902010

116

Table A3.3 Case notications, 19902010

117

Table A3.4 Treatment outcomes, new smear-positive cases, 19952009

118

Table A3.5 Treatment outcomes, retreatment cases, 19952009

118

Table A3.6 HIV testing and provision of CPT, ART and IPT, 20052010

119

Table A3.7 Testing for MDR-TB and number of conrmed cases of MDR-TB, 20052010

119

Table A3.8 New smear-positive case notication by age and sex, 19952010

120

Estimates of mortality, prevalence and incidence


Estimated values are shown as best estimates followed by lower and upper bounds. The lower and upper bounds are
de ned as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of outcome distributions produced in simulations. See ANNEX 1 for further
details.
Estimated numbers are shown rounded to two signicant gures. Estimated rates are shown rounded to three
signicant gures unless the value is under 100, in which case rates are shown rounded to two signicant gures.
Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are re ned, so they
may differ from those published in previous reports in this series. Estimates published in previous global TB control
reports should no longer be used.

Data source
Data shown in this annex are taken from the WHO global TB database on 2 September 2011. Data shown in the main
part of the report were taken from the database on 21 June 2011. As a result, data in this annex may differ slightly from
those in the main part of the report.
Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data.

114

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Global

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Africa
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
The Americas 1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Eastern
1990
Mediterranean 1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Europe
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
South-East
1990
Asia
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Western
1990
Pacific
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

5 283
5 702
6 097
6 481
6 714
6 792
6 870
507
580
656
742
798
817
837
723
777
834
885
914
924
933
381
433
484
538
573
585
597
846
862
868
880
890
893
896
1 317
1 446
1 572
1 694
1 762
1 785
1 808
1 510
1 605
1 683
1 743
1 777
1 788
1 798

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

1 300
1 400
1 300
1 200
1 100
1 100
1 100
180
200
240
250
250
240
250
55
41
32
27
24
21
20
120
130
140
120
95
95
95
110
94
75
72
62
58
61
570
630
670
610
550
520
500
310
260
200
170
140
140
130

(1 2001 500)
(1 2001 500)
(1 2001 500)
(1 1001 400)
(9601 300)
(9301 200)
(9201 200)
(120250)
(150260)
(170310)
(190320)
(210290)
(220270)
(220280)
(4171)
(3447)
(2935)
(2429)
(2226)
(1825)
(1723)
(86150)
(110150)
(120160)
(96140)
(74120)
(73120)
(74120)
(78150)
(77110)
(7377)
(7073)
(5964)
(5560)
(4875)
(440730)
(490790)
(510840)
(490750)
(410710)
(390670)
(370640)
(280340)
(220300)
(170230)
(150190)
(120160)
(120160)
(120150)

RATEa

25
24
22
19
17
16
15
35
34
36
34
31
30
30
7.5
5.2
3.8
3.0
2.7
2.3
2.2
31
30
29
22
17
16
16
13
11
8.6
8.2
6.9
6.5
6.8
44
44
42
36
31
29
27
20
16
12
9.8
7.9
7.7
7.5

(2229)
(2127)
(1925)
(1722)
(1419)
(1418)
(1318)
(2449)
(2544)
(2747)
(2644)
(2636)
(2733)
(2634)
(5.69.8)
(4.46.1)
(3.54.2)
(2.83.3)
(2.52.9)
(1.92.7)
(1.82.5)
(2341)
(2634)
(2533)
(1826)
(1321)
(1320)
(1220)
(9.218)
(8.913)
(8.48.9)
(8.08.3)
(6.77.2)
(6.26.7)
(5.48.3)
(3355)
(3455)
(3354)
(2944)
(2340)
(2238)
(2135)
(1823)
(1418)
(1014)
(8.911)
(6.98.9)
(6.78.7)
(6.68.4)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

14 000
15 000
15 000
14 000
13 000
12 000
12 000
1 700
1 900
2 300
2 700
2 700
2 700
2 800
660
540
470
400
360
350
330
1 000
1 100
1 200
1 100
1 000
1 000
1 000
780
710
670
610
580
570
560
6 000
6 700
7 200
6 100
5 400
5 200
5 000
3 800
3 700
3 400
3 000
2 700
2 600
2 500

(13 00015 000)


(13 00016 000)
(14 00017 000)
(13 00015 000)
(11 00014 000)
(11 00014 000)
(11 00014 000)
(1 2002 300)
(1 4002 400)
(1 7003 100)
(2 1003 400)
(2 2003 300)
(2 3003 200)
(2 3003 300)
(480870)
(430670)
(370590)
(310490)
(280450)
(270430)
(260410)
(5901 500)
(7201 600)
(7601 700)
(7301 600)
(6601 400)
(6701 400)
(6701 500)
(5401 100)
(550900)
(500870)
(460780)
(440740)
(430720)
(430720)
(5 2006 900)
(5 8007 600)
(6 3008 100)
(5 1007 100)
(4 3006 700)
(4 0006 600)
(3 7006 500)
(3 5004 100)
(3 3004 000)
(3 0003 800)
(2 6003 300)
(2 4003 000)
(2 3002 900)
(2 2002 800)

RATE

263
256
250
214
190
183
178
331
325
358
367
342
332
332
92
70
56
45
40
37
36
266
258
248
206
177
175
173
92
83
77
69
65
64
63
457
462
456
359
307
291
278
249
228
201
170
150
143
139

(241287)
(236277)
(229272)
(194235)
(169212)
(162205)
(156201)
(228453)
(240421)
(264465)
(281463)
(280409)
(280389)
(277392)
(67121)
(5587)
(4470)
(3656)
(3149)
(2946)
(2844)
(156405)
(167368)
(157360)
(135292)
(116251)
(114248)
(112246)
(64124)
(64105)
(58100)
(5288)
(4983)
(4981)
(4780)
(393526)
(404522)
(401514)
(302421)
(241380)
(223368)
(206360)
(229269)
(207251)
(178225)
(151189)
(134167)
(127160)
(124156)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

7 600
8 000
8 600
9 000
8 900
8 800
8 800
1 100
1 400
1 800
2 200
2 300
2 300
2 300
420
380
340
310
280
270
270
460
520
570
610
630
640
650
460
460
490
450
430
430
420
2 800
3 100
3 400
3 600
3 500
3 500
3 500
2 400
2 200
2 000
1 800
1 700
1 700
1 700

(7 0008 300)
(7 5008 500)
(8 1009 100)
(8 5009 500)
(8 5009 300)
(8 5009 200)
(8 5009 200)
(8101 400)
(1 1001 700)
(1 5002 200)
(1 9002 600)
(2 1002 500)
(2 1002 400)
(2 1002 500)
(360490)
(350410)
(320360)
(290330)
(260300)
(260290)
(250280)
(350580)
(470580)
(500630)
(540680)
(560710)
(570720)
(580730)
(390530)
(430500)
(450530)
(420490)
(400460)
(400450)
(390450)
(2 5003 200)
(2 8003 400)
(3 1003 600)
(3 3003 800)
(3 3003 800)
(3 3003 800)
(3 2003 700)
(2 0002 800)
(1 9002 500)
(1 8002 200)
(1 7002 000)
(1 6001 900)
(1 6001 900)
(1 5001 800)

RATE

144
141
141
139
133
130
128
215
235
279
302
286
279
276
58
49
41
35
31
30
29
120
121
117
113
110
110
109
54
54
56
52
49
48
47
214
215
215
210
201
197
193
157
136
119
105
98
95
93

(132157)
(132150)
(133149)
(131146)
(127138)
(125135)
(123133)
(160277)
(189286)
(227336)
(257351)
(260313)
(261297)
(256296)
(5068)
(4552)
(3844)
(3237)
(2933)
(2832)
(2730)
(92152)
(108135)
(104131)
(100126)
(98124)
(97123)
(97122)
(4663)
(5058)
(5261)
(4855)
(4552)
(4551)
(4450)
(187243)
(195235)
(199232)
(194226)
(186216)
(182211)
(179207)
(132185)
(118155)
(106133)
(95115)
(89107)
(87104)
(85102)

Summary by WHO region

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

115

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Global

Africa

The Americas

Eastern
Mediterranean

Europe

South-East
Asia

Western
Pacific

116

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

5 283
5 702
6 097
6 481
6 714
6 792
6 870
507
580
656
742
798
817
837
723
777
834
885
914
924
933
381
433
484
538
573
585
597
846
862
868
880
890
893
896
1 317
1 446
1 572
1 694
1 762
1 785
1 808
1 510
1 605
1 683
1 743
1 777
1 788
1 798

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

7 600
8 000
8 600
9 000
8 900
8 800
8 800
1 100
1 400
1 800
2 200
2 300
2 300
2 300
420
380
340
310
280
270
270
460
520
570
610
630
640
650
460
460
490
450
430
430
420
2 800
3 100
3 400
3 600
3 500
3 500
3 500
2 400
2 200
2 000
1 800
1 700
1 700
1 700

(7 0008 300)
(7 5008 500)
(8 1009 100)
(8 5009 500)
(8 5009 300)
(8 5009 200)
(8 5009 200)
(8101 400)
(1 1001 700)
(1 5002 200)
(1 9002 600)
(2 1002 500)
(2 1002 400)
(2 1002 500)
(360490)
(350410)
(320360)
(290330)
(260300)
(260290)
(250280)
(350580)
(470580)
(500630)
(540680)
(560710)
(570720)
(580730)
(390530)
(430500)
(450530)
(420490)
(400460)
(400450)
(390450)
(2 5003 200)
(2 8003 400)
(3 1003 600)
(3 3003 800)
(3 3003 800)
(3 3003 800)
(3 2003 700)
(2 0002 800)
(1 9002 500)
(1 8002 200)
(1 7002 000)
(1 6001 900)
(1 6001 900)
(1 5001 800)

RATEb

144
141
141
139
133
130
128
215
235
279
302
286
279
276
58
49
41
35
31
30
29
120
121
117
113
110
110
109
54
54
56
52
49
48
47
214
215
215
210
201
197
193
157
136
119
105
98
95
93

(132157)
(132150)
(133149)
(131146)
(127138)
(125135)
(123133)
(160277)
(189286)
(227336)
(257351)
(260313)
(261297)
(256296)
(5068)
(4552)
(3844)
(3237)
(2933)
(2832)
(2730)
(92152)
(108135)
(104131)
(100126)
(98124)
(97123)
(97122)
(4663)
(5058)
(5261)
(4855)
(4552)
(4551)
(4450)
(187243)
(195235)
(199232)
(194226)
(186216)
(182211)
(179207)
(132185)
(118155)
(106133)
(95115)
(89107)
(87104)
(85102)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

320
630
940
1 100
1 100
1 100
1 100
280
530
760
930
920
910
900
35
40
39
37
37
36
35
1.0
2.1
4.1
7.3
9.9
11
12
3.1
5.2
11
17
19
23
20
35
110
180
190
170
180
190
4.1
19
24
32
35
34
35

(260370)
(550720)
(8301 100)
(1 0001 200)
(1 0001 200)
(1 0001 200)
(1 0001 200)
(220340)
(440630)
(660880)
(8201000)
(8301000)
(840980)
(820980)
(2548)
(3249)
(3247)
(3340)
(3341)
(3340)
(3138)
(0.371.8)
(1.23.2)
(35.3)
(5.89)
(7.812)
(8.614)
(9.815)
(2.63.7)
(4.46.1)
(9.113)
(1420)
(1327)
(2126)
(1922)
(2547)
(84150)
(130230)
(140240)
(130220)
(130220)
(140230)
(2.46.1)
(1227)
(1832)
(2441)
(2645)
(2644)
(2645)

RATEb

6.0
11
15
17
16
16
16
55
91
116
125
116
111
107
4.9
5.1
4.6
4.2
4.1
3.9
3.7
0.25
0.48
0.85
1.4
1.7
1.9
2.1
0.37
0.61
1.2
1.9
2.2
2.6
2.3
2.7
7.9
11
11
9.9
9.9
10
0.27
1.2
1.4
1.8
2.0
1.9
1.9

NUMBER

(5.07.1)
(9.613)
(1417)
(1519)
(1518)
(1517)
(1517)
(4368)
(76108)
(100133)
(110141)
(104127)
(103120)
(98117)
(3.46.7)
(4.16.3)
(3.85.6)
(3.84.6)
(3.74.5)
(3.64.3)
(3.44.1)
(0.100.48)
(0.280.74)
(0.621.1)
(1.11.7)
(1.42.1)
(1.52.3)
(1.62.5)
(0.300.44)
(0.520.70)
(1.01.4)
(1.62.2)
(1.43.1)
(2.32.9)
(2.12.5)
(1.93.6)
(5.810)
(8.515)
(8.414)
(7.413)
(7.613)
(7.913)
(0.160.41)
(0.781.7)
(1.11.9)
(1.42.3)
(1.52.5)
(1.42.5)
(1.42.5)

3 740 193
3 400 391
3 746 813
5 130 297
5 721 861
5 803 185
5 770 498
418 520
504 377
792 911
1 186 801
1 330 146
1 380 577
1 380 417
231 186
258 188
238 580
228 018
218 249
201 606
214 030
234 620
121 745
141 748
287 158
392 633
411 172
411 961
242 429
290 031
373 061
365 088
339 119
328 798
309 818
1 719 365
1 401 096
1 414 228
1 789 186
2 078 238
2 124 371
2 127 973
894 073
824 954
786 285
1 274 046
1 363 476
1 356 661
1 326 300

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

RATEb

71
60
61
79
85
85
84
83
87
121
160
167
169
165
32
33
29
26
24
22
23
62
28
29
53
69
70
69
29
34
43
42
38
37
35
131
97
90
106
118
119
118
59
51
47
73
77
76
74

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

49
42
44
57
64
66
65
39
37
43
53
58
61
60
55
68
70
75
77
73
80
51
23
25
47
62
64
63
53
63
76
80
78
77
74
61
45
42
50
59
61
61
38
38
39
70
79
80
79

(4553)
(4045)
(4146)
(5460)
(6267)
(6368)
(6368)
(3052)
(3046)
(3653)
(4662)
(5364)
(5765)
(5664)
(4764)
(6373)
(6575)
(7080)
(7283)
(6978)
(7586)
(4167)
(2126)
(2228)
(4254)
(5570)
(5772)
(5671)
(4663)
(5867)
(7183)
(7587)
(7384)
(7283)
(6979)
(5470)
(4150)
(3945)
(4754)
(5563)
(5665)
(5766)
(3245)
(3344)
(3544)
(6477)
(7286)
(7387)
(7386)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Global

71

84

83

165

32

23

62

69

29

35

131

118

59

74

Africa

The Americas

Eastern
Mediterranean

Europe

South-East
Asia

Western
Pacific

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
3 740 193
3 400 391
3 746 813
5 130 297
5 721 861
5 803 185
5 770 498
418 520
504 377
792 911
1 186 801
1 330 146
1 380 577
1 380 417
231 186
258 188
238 580
228 018
218 249
201 606
214 030
234 620
121 745
141 748
287 158
392 633
411 172
411 961
242 429
290 031
373 061
365 088
339 119
328 798
309 818
1 719 365
1 401 096
1 414 228
1 789 186
2 078 238
2 124 371
2 127 973
894 073
824 954
786 285
1 274 046
1 363 476
1 356 661
1 326 300

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN
30 046
1 175 290
1 540 720
2 413 732
2 656 275
2 662 565
2 652 481
24 064
212 910
367 831
550 004
595 394
607 257
601 149
1 542
138 932
131 294
124 840
119 862
110 613
116 864
1 587
46 851
60 959
113 765
166 558
168 013
168 627
0
104 444
94 474
96 145
105 160
100 468
88 378
2 769
357 882
510 053
857 371
1 007 382
1 028 656
1 047 013
84
314 271
376 109
671 607
661 919
647 558
630 450

22 393
1 811 850
1 614 819
1 722 343
1 979 978
2 010 610
1 998 265
6 137
191 477
221 715
364 785
446 400
473 217
477 516
516
72 312
60 392
56 056
51 818
45 033
52 223
12 394
51 823
34 289
102 274
137 780
143 633
137 301
0
146 592
208 218
157 299
159 328
152 438
140 984
3 241
939 945
741 471
594 185
635 427
636 755
615 463
105
409 701
348 734
447 744
549 225
559 534
574 778

EXTRAPULMONARY
4 237
262 728
399 615
686 566
786 191
831 388
804 338
2 067
72 689
141 156
208 979
233 576
244 806
247 020
723
32 991
32 037
33 285
33 218
31 422
32 226
754
33 382
40 754
64 612
77 247
87 726
92 070
0
29 866
35 118
49 788
42 899
47 199
38 930
656
76 865
120 708
242 332
310 700
329 338
328 421
37
16 935
29 842
87 570
88 551
90 897
65 671

OTHER RELAPSE
0
5
37
8 111
18 429
9 998
12 865
0
0
0
2 941
1 484
346
642
0
5
37
3 685
3 343
4 363
2 131
0
0
0
12
0
76
633
0
0
0
0
8 858
3 393
7 924
0
0
0
1 439
1 866
1 796
1 508
0
0
0
34
2 878
24
27

734
59 240
115 314
259 937
280 988
288 624
285 795
554
15 133
19 153
60 092
53 292
54 951
53 967
180
1 723
10 834
10 152
10 008
10 175
10 407
0
2 407
5 568
6 495
11 048
11 724
11 203
0
7 927
21 607
22 248
22 874
25 300
24 139
0
5 546
27 095
93 859
122 863
127 826
130 714
0
26 504
31 057
67 091
60 903
58 648
55 365

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN
49
0
236 113
406 424
495 112
385 181
416 917
49
0
68 085
66 449
82 971
89 377
94 506
0
0
14 344
12 481
13 193
11 317
12 123
0
0
0
5 334
5 393
6 240
8 606
0
0
19 166
64 900
112 511
41 833
59 699
0
0
80 444
158 215
209 433
203 598
208 542
0
0
54 074
99 045
71 611
32 816
33 441

783
59 240
351 427
666 361
776 100
673 805
702 712
603
15 133
87 238
126 541
136 263
144 328
148 473
180
1 723
25 178
22 633
23 201
21 492
22 530
0
2 407
5 568
11 829
16 441
17 964
19 809
0
7 927
40 773
87 148
135 385
67 133
83 838
0
5 546
107 539
252 074
332 296
331 424
339 256
0
26 504
85 131
166 136
132 514
91 464
88 806

29
44
56
18 039
16 851
36 693
25 934
0
0
0
2 075
4 607
305
317
29
44
56
2 106
232
3 829
885
0
0
0
20
18
737
3 186
0
0
0
3 530
8 021
24 989
15 508
0
0
0
202
132
261
1 118
0
0
0
10 106
3 841
6 572
4 920

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM
57
39
49
58
57
57
57
80
53
62
60
57
56
56
75
66
68
69
70
71
69
11
47
64
53
55
54
55

42
31
38
40
40
39
46
28
41
59
61
62
63
44
43
52
60
55
54
52

Summary by WHO region

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

117

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

Global

57

87

60

80

50

76

79

88

67

68

33

89

80

93

Africa

The Americas

Eastern
Mediterranean

Europe

South-East
Asia

Western
Pacific

YEAR

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

1 175 290
1 540 720
2 413 732
2 586 522
2 656 275
2 662 565
212 910
367 831
550 004
566 988
595 394
607 257
138 932
131 294
124 840
119 838
119 862
110 613
46 851
60 959
113 765
155 572
166 558
168 013
104 444
94 474
96 145
105 271
105 160
100 468
357 882
510 053
857 371
972 441
1 007 382
1 028 656
314 271
376 109
671 607
666 412
661 919
647 558

SIZE OF
COHORT

1 000 581
1 452 991
2 396 387
2 590 608
2 648 749
2 658 344
177 567
364 804
563 750
576 752
590 866
605 932
128 531
110 642
118 840
115 636
109 007
122 391
46 318
63 749
113 742
155 658
166 719
167 317
33 823
41 480
81 410
108 175
114 234
99 224
318 410
512 286
855 962
973 507
1 011 353
1 022 380
295 932
360 030
662 683
660 880
656 570
641 100

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

CURED

85
94
99
100
100
100
83
99
102
102
99
100
93
84
95
96
91
111
99
105
100
100
100
100
32
44
85
103
109
99
89
100
100
100
100
99
94
96
99
99
99
99

40
60
77
79
79
80
46
59
62
68
70
70
37
60
55
57
56
53
60
69
72
75
74
74
58
47
59
59
54
58
9
44
83
84
84
85
67
85
89
89
89
90

COMPLETED

17
9
7
7
7
7
14
12
13
11
11
10
14
17
24
22
21
23
19
12
11
12
13
14
10
28
13
12
15
10
23
6
4
4
4
3
13
5
3
3
3
3

DIED

3
4
4
4
4
4
6
7
7
6
6
5
3
5
5
5
5
5
2
4
3
3
2
3
6
5
8
8
8
8
1
2
4
4
4
4
2
2
2
2
2
2

FAILED

1
1
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
6
6
7
9
10
12
0
1
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1

DEFAULTED

5
7
5
5
5
4
12
11
9
7
7
6
6
8
7
7
7
8
13
8
8
5
5
5
4
6
7
7
6
7
2
7
6
5
5
5
4
2
1
1
1
1

NOT
EVALUATED

34
19
4
4
4
4
20
10
7
6
6
7
39
11
9
8
10
11
4
6
5
4
4
3
16
7
5
5
6
5
64
40
1
1
1
1
13
4
3
4
4
3

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

Global

86

72

69

70

72

50

75

77

40

48

68

75

90

86

Africa

The Americas

Eastern
Mediterranean

Europe

South-East
Asia

Western
Pacific

118

YEAR

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

59 240
351 427
666 361
767 155
776 100
673 805
15 133
87 238
126 541
134 133
136 263
144 328
1 723
25 178
22 633
21 038
23 201
21 492
2 407
5 568
11 829
13 898
16 441
17 964
7 927
40 773
87 148
148 613
135 385
67 133
5 546
107 539
252 074
310 029
332 296
331 424
26 504
85 131
166 136
139 444
132 514
91 464

71 395
188 509
546 182
533 643
594 939
592 460
5 756
44 147
114 838
113 504
98 414
94 342
1 104
15 302
18 603
18 975
15 483
19 146
1 860
4 217
12 860
14 372
14 990
16 332
480
10 739
39 497
69 300
60 077
57 419
3 271
59 337
254 378
227 767
323 436
332 286
58 924
54 767
106 006
89 725
82 539
72 935

121
54
82
70
77
88
38
51
91
85
72
65
64
61
82
90
67
89
77
76
109
103
91
91
6
26
45
47
44
86
59
55
101
73
97
100
222
64
64
64
62
80

CURED

82
60
51
58
50
49
57
47
35
52
48
50
61
47
38
35
29
29
61
51
60
60
57
56
20
39
32
28
30
27
62
57
49
63
47
48
88
83
81
79
80
79

COMPLETED

4
10
19
10
22
23
12
11
27
16
21
20
11
8
16
23
23
22
14
11
15
17
19
21
20
19
18
24
18
21
6
14
22
3
28
27
2
3
6
7
6
7

DIED

3
6
7
7
7
7
9
9
11
7
9
9
6
5
6
7
8
8
3
6
5
4
4
4
11
9
11
11
11
11
4
6
7
7
7
7
3
2
3
3
3
3

FAILED

3
4
4
6
5
6
3
3
3
4
3
3
4
3
2
3
2
3
4
7
4
3
3
3
8
14
13
19
20
23
5
5
5
5
4
4
3
2
3
3
2
2

DEFAULTED

3
11
12
11
11
10
12
16
13
10
10
9
11
12
15
18
20
19
12
15
10
10
11
10
32
11
14
12
12
11
15
15
15
13
12
12
1
1
2
2
2
2

NOT
EVALUATED

4
10
6
8
5
5
6
14
12
11
9
10
8
25
21
15
17
21
5
11
6
5
6
6
8
8
10
7
9
7
8
3
2
8
2
2
3
9
6
6
7
7

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

YEAR

Global

35

11

59

35

46

11

41

85

23

19

Africa

The Americas

Eastern
Mediterranean

Europe

South-East
Asia

Western
Pacific

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

8.5
22
29
35
11
47
56
59
35
44
50
46
<1
6
11
11
41
77
83
85
2
4
14
23
2
11
12
19

470 128
1 380 408
1 784 325
2 150 116
140 713
664 034
816 338
876 918
84 032
101 487
108 010
103 557
2 582
24 280
45 408
45 969
178 349
353 550
328 648
317 466
31 847
84 113
318 237
540 660
32 605
152 944
167 684
265 546

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE

5 554 760
6 233 824
6 225 059
6 196 595
1 255 325
1 417 724
1 470 259
1 475 117
242 605
231 674
216 752
226 859
292 512
398 044
418 149
421 626
433 518
459 651
395 620
375 562
1 947 603
2 287 803
2 328 230
2 332 779
1 383 197
1 438 928
1 396 049
1 364 652

103 683
372 092
465 978
488 446
73 332
312 218
370 245
388 137
14 232
16 953
18 148
18 157
330
1 158
1 625
1 565
6 543
12 611
15 643
17 182
7 025
18 601
46 089
50 985
2 221
10 551
14 228
12 420

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

22
27
26
23
52
47
45
44
17
17
17
18
15
5
4
3
3
3
5
5
22
22
14
9
7
7
8
5

77
72
77
77
78
74
77
76
22
33
36
47
18
42
41
51
26
63
51
48
50
59
86
87
32
55
64
55

36
32
39
46
29
30
36
42
85
67
61
65
16
43
41
37
16
32
62
70
31
37
50
57
51
28
16
41

25 938
50 883
89 083
178 242
22 211
25 553
63 290
156 066
3 727
11 728
5 390
12 804
0
702
464
253
0
12 003
17 826
6 575
0
208
467
581
0
689
1 646
1 963

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

YEAR
Global

Africa

The Americas

Eastern
Mediterranean

Europe

South-East
Asia

Western
Pacific

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa
11 988
31 077
46 897
55 112
2 445
9 543
10 741
9 750
4 427
2 227
2 884
2 646
350
555
496
886
4 347
15 845
28 157
33 598
68
1 717
2 560
3 937
351
1 190
2 059
4 295

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED
4 830 752
5 440 873
5 514 561
5 467 949
1 126 709
1 276 854
1 325 626
1 326 327
217 866
208 241
191 431
203 444
280 663
381 585
399 448
398 631
303 232
316 245
303 498
276 216
1 695 327
1 955 375
1 996 545
1 992 405
1 206 955
1 302 573
1 298 013
1 270 926

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB
62 806
100 500
111 101
112 920
1 826
2 566
3 878
2 732
4 504
12 460
11 513
10 229
1 442
2 089
1 760
2 397
34 527
78 323
87 815
84 413
661
902
950
1 073
19 846
4 160
5 185
12 076

1
2
2
2
0
0
0
0
2
6
6
5
1
1
0
1
11
25
29
31
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
1

Summary by WHO region

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

1 909
8 856
12 879
12 686
277
177
372
248
212
352
992
226
30
92
80
104
1 334
8 177
10 328
11 646
9
22
10
19
47
36
1 097
443

NOTIFIED
666 361
776 100
673 805
702 712
126 541
136 263
144 328
148 473
22 633
23 201
21 492
22 530
11 829
16 441
17 964
19 809
87 148
135 385
67 133
83 838
252 074
332 296
331 424
339 256
166 136
132 514
91 464
88 806

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

23 497
41 559
42 294
46 737
3 922
9 614
4 340
4 294
10 498
4 286
3 056
4 182
94
1 555
1 274
1 257
7 024
21 098
27 618
33 696
420
2 823
5 069
1 264
1 539
2 183
937
2 044

4
5
6
7
3
7
3
3
46
18
14
19
1
9
7
6
8
16
41
40
0
1
2
0
1
2
1
2

7 047
11 742
16 284
22 875
2 073
957
1 191
1 359
3 052
1 517
1 135
1 216
46
334
395
575
1 711
7 173
10 463
16 522
25
875
2 538
705
140
886
562
2 498

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

119

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[
MALE

Global

Africa

The Americas

Eastern
Mediterranean

Europe

South-East
Asia

Western
Pacific

120

YEAR

014

1524

2534

3544

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

7 491
12 387
18 414
20 221
2 910
3 625
7 635
8 393
437
3 464
1 520
1 050
2 010
1 339
1 546
2 316
553
201
298
138
165
2 453
5 064
6 737
1 416
1 305
2 351
1 587

48 816
115 250
242 358
268 684
16 754
29 522
54 066
57 146
2 888
18 564
16 410
11 456
6 796
8 135
13 558
19 526
3 588
4 636
6 172
7 124
3 179
30 093
94 638
114 806
15 611
24 300
57 514
58 626

76 799
172 897
329 719
345 525
28 172
47 654
94 388
98 636
3 443
21 869
16 671
14 246
8 673
9 002
14 609
19 993
7 046
8 323
9 150
12 868
6 467
45 720
120 560
136 683
22 998
40 329
74 341
63 099

65 678
156 274
312 528
336 494
20 240
34 435
71 072
78 660
3 157
19 787
14 369
11 297
5 475
6 525
10 798
14 908
10 157
9 862
9 152
11 995
6 508
47 107
122 256
142 080
20 141
38 558
84 881
77 554

FEMALE
65+

UNKNOWN

49 514 41 756 34 776


121 277 82 843 75 158
261 234 184 836 166 858
298 313 227 237 186 553
12 017
7 008
4 104
17 923
8 970
5 751
40 974 18 931 12 143
48 543 24 094 14 478
2 448
1 866
2 251
15 138
9 899
9 717
12 340
7 801
7 951
10 608
7 428
7 074
3 731
3 732
2 604
4 409
2 990
3 036
8 729
6 581
5 595
13 086 10 596
9 521
7 625
5 716
4 842
8 065
4 312
3 323
8 705
4 443
4 089
11 887
6 628
3 873
5 241
4 682
3 523
38 058 25 080 16 208
107 228 74 084 45 533
132 411 101 728 67 131
18 452 18 752 17 452
37 684 31 592 37 123
83 258 72 996 91 547
81 778 76 763 84 476

0
0
42
7 502
0
0
0
17
0
0
0
59
0
0
0
0
0
0
42
7 423
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3

4554

5564

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

4554

5564

65+

UNKNOWN

7 730 41 378 50 102 32 741 22 688


14 749 94 642 110 307 74 706 49 823
26 178 199 700 220 530 153 503 106 029
28 792 210 567 225 765 163 084 118 438
3 167 15 873 19 005 11 339
6 643
4 315 29 530 35 386 20 037
9 402
10 023 57 115 75 056 43 213 22 855
10 287 55 537 76 051 47 070 26 299
431
2 293
2 434
1 654
1 109
3 535 15 305 14 961 10 323
7 294
1 718 12 405 11 563
7 891
5 933
1 136
8 401
8 490
5 808
4 874
1 881
5 035
5 797
3 679
3 047
1 711
6 710
5 780
3 922
2 851
2 766 13 529 12 098
8 386
6 245
4 377 21 108 17 151 12 183
9 776
548
2 906
3 636
2 594
1 549
290
3 507
4 406
2 946
1 798
422
4 667
5 101
3 161
2 242
269
4 800
6 344
4 052
2 930
250
2 187
2 834
2 404
2 003
3 222 21 518 25 653 19 241 13 019
8 591 71 923 76 779 54 000 37 709
10 923 84 006 84 704 63 272 48 470
1 453 13 084 16 396 11 071
8 337
1 676 18 072 24 121 18 237 15 459
2 658 40 061 39 933 36 852 31 045
1 800 36 715 33 025 30 699 26 089

17 816
33 696
72 023
86 190
3 655
4 581
11 047
13 522
912
5 038
3 788
3 465
2 742
2 039
4 383
7 532
1 560
1 243
1 337
1 961
1 866
8 142
24 289
34 052
7 081
12 653
27 179
25 658

16 686
33 830
65 717
75 169
1 734
2 578
7 163
8 685
1 311
5 894
4 751
4 060
1 902
1 893
3 399
7 032
3 289
2 491
3 176
3 207
1 480
5 468
12 975
20 004
6 970
15 506
34 253
32 181

0
0
15
2 595
0
0
0
9
0
0
0
22
0
0
0
0
0
0
15
2 561
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3

014

1524

2534

3544

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO
1.7
1.8
1.8
1.9
1.5
1.4
1.3
1.4
1.6
1.6
1.6
1.7
1.4
1.4
1.2
1.1
2.5
2.3
2.1
2.4
2.3
2.1
2.0
2.0
1.8
2.0
2.2
2.4

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

African Region
Table A3.1 Estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB, 19902010

123

Table A3.2 Incidence, notication and case detection rates, all forms, 19902010

126

Table A3.3 Case notications, 19902010

129

Table A3.4 Treatment outcomes, new smear-positive cases, 19952009

132

Table A3.5 Treatment outcomes, retreatment cases, 19952009

135

Table A3.6 HIV testing and provision of CPT, ART and IPT, 20052010

138

Table A3.7 Testing for MDR-TB and number of conrmed cases of MDR-TB, 20052010

140

Table A3.8 New smear-positive case notication by age and sex, 19952010

142

Table A3.9 Laboratories, NTP services, drug management, human resources and infection
control, 2010

144

Estimates of mortality, prevalence and incidence


Estimated values are shown as best estimates followed by lower and upper bounds. The lower and upper bounds are
de ned as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of outcome distributions produced in simulations. See ANNEX 1 for further
details.
Estimated numbers are shown rounded to two signicant gures. Estimated rates are shown rounded to three
signicant gures unless the value is under 100, in which case rates are shown rounded to two signicant gures.
Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are re ned, so they
may differ from those published in previous reports in this series. Estimates published in previous global TB control
reports should no longer be used.

Data source
Data shown in this annex are taken from the WHO global TB database on 2 September 2011. Data shown in the main
part of the report were taken from the database on 21 June 2011. As a result, data in this annex may differ slightly from
those in the main part of the report.
Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data.

122

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Algeria

Angola

Benin

Botswana

Burkina Faso

Burundi

Cameroon

Cape Verde

Central African
Republic

Chad

Comoros

Congo

Cte d'Ivoire

Democratic
Republic
of the Congo

Equatorial
Guinea

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

25
28
31
33
34
35
35
10
12
14
16
18
19
19
5
6
7
8
8
9
9
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
9
11
12
14
16
16
16
6
6
6
7
8
8
8
12
14
16
18
19
19
20
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
6
7
8
10
11
11
11
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
2
3
3
4
4
4
4
13
15
17
18
19
19
20
36
44
50
57
62
64
66
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

2.3
2.5
3.8
4.2
3.8
4.2
4.3
3.9
5.9
6.0
3.5
5.2
5.7
6.5
0.61
0.74
0.88
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.2
1.3
0.93
0.57
0.5
0.43
0.43
0.9
0.9
1.4
1.8
1.6
1.5
1.3
1.1
1.6
1.4
1.6
1.5
1.3
1.1
1.4
2.7
3.9
3.5
2.8
2.8
2.8
0.14
0.14
0.16
0.15
0.15
0.14
0.14
0.62
0.67
1.3
1.9
1.6
1.6
1.5
1.5
2.6
4.1
5.9
5.6
5.4
5.3
0.085
0.076
0.065
0.065
0.056
0.055
0.053
1
1.1
1.3
2.1
2.2
2.1
2
3.3
3.3
4
3.5
2.5
2.2
2.1
28
32
33
32
34
35
36
0.022
0.025
0.035
0.044
0.061
0.046
0.039

(1.24.2)
(1.24.7)
(1.96.6)
(2.17.5)
(1.86.9)
(2.17.5)
(2.17.7)
(1.87.2)
(4.47.5)
(4.28.1)
(2.26)
(3.28.3)
(3.58.9)
(4.19.6)
(0.241.2)
(0.51)
(0.621.2)
(0.761.5)
(0.861.6)
(0.931.7)
(11.8)
(0.342.8)
(0.642.1)
(0.571.4)
(0.360.85)
(0.390.64)
(0.310.59)
(0.310.57)
(0.571.3)
(0.591.3)
(0.981.9)
(1.32.4)
(1.22.1)
(1.11.9)
(0.991.7)
(0.631.9)
(1.22.2)
(0.992)
(1.22.1)
(1.11.9)
(0.951.7)
(0.841.5)
(0.572.8)
(23.5)
(2.85.1)
(2.25.3)
(1.84.2)
(1.84.2)
(1.84.1)
(0.0660.23)
(0.110.19)
(0.110.2)
(0.110.19)
(0.110.2)
(0.10.19)
(0.10.19)
(0.261.2)
(0.411)
(0.881.7)
(1.42.5)
(12.3)
(12.2)
(0.992.2)
(0.772.5)
(23.4)
(3.15.3)
(4.57.4)
(4.27.3)
(47)
(3.96.8)
(0.0450.14)
(0.0570.098)
(0.0470.085)
(0.0490.084)
(0.0410.074)
(0.040.072)
(0.0390.07)
(0.61.6)
(0.741.5)
(0.881.9)
(1.43.1)
(1.53.1)
(1.43)
(1.32.9)
(1.65.8)
(1.95)
(2.65.7)
(2.25.2)
(1.63.7)
(1.53.1)
(1.43.2)
(2236)
(2541)
(2541)
(2441)
(2644)
(2744)
(2745)
(0.020.025)
(0.0230.03)
(0.030.043)
(0.0370.055)
(0.0520.073)
(0.0390.056)
(0.0310.049)

RATEa

9.2
8.7
12
13
11
12
12
38
49
43
21
29
31
34
13
13
14
14
14
15
16
87
80
53
30
26
22
21
9.7
8.5
12
13
10
9.1
8.1
20
27
23
23
19
16
14
11
19
25
20
15
15
14
39
36
35
32
31
29
28
21
20
34
47
37
37
34
25
38
50
60
53
49
47
19
15
11
10
8.1
7.6
7.3
43
39
42
61
57
54
49
26
22
24
19
13
11
11
78
73
66
56
55
54
54
5.9
5.8
6.8
7.3
9.2
6.7
5.5

(4.616)
(4.216)
(6.322)
(6.523)
(5.320)
(621)
(622)
(1769)
(3762)
(3058)
(1336)
(1846)
(1948)
(2251)
(5.125)
(8.918)
(9.518)
(1019)
(1019)
(1120)
(1120)
(24204)
(41134)
(3280)
(1945)
(2033)
(1630)
(1528)
(6.114)
(5.512)
(816)
(8.817)
(7.613)
(6.912)
(611)
(1133)
(1936)
(1631)
(1730)
(1424)
(1221)
(1018)
(4.723)
(1425)
(1832)
(1330)
(9.623)
(9.322)
(921)
(1967)
(2748)
(2646)
(2341)
(2241)
(2139)
(2138)
(940)
(1231)
(2447)
(3463)
(2453)
(2452)
(2250)
(1342)
(2849)
(3864)
(4676)
(4068)
(3764)
(3561)
(1032)
(1220)
(8.415)
(7.613)
(5.911)
(5.610)
(5.49.5)
(2565)
(2753)
(2861)
(4087)
(3881)
(3676)
(3271)
(1346)
(1334)
(1635)
(1229)
(8.619)
(7.516)
(716)
(6099)
(5692)
(5084)
(4272)
(4271)
(4269)
(4169)
(5.36.8)
(5.16.8)
(5.88.3)
(69)
(7.911)
(5.78.2)
(4.57)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

26
29
41
47
43
47
48
37
52
58
53
68
72
78
6.1
7.3
8.6
11
12
13
13
11
13
12
9.8
8.6
7.9
7.6
8
8.2
13
16
15
14
13
12
15
15
17
16
15
14
15
24
35
40
37
37
36
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.4
1.4
1.3
1.3
6.2
7.2
12
18
17
17
17
14
23
35
50
49
48
47
0.75
0.68
0.6
0.58
0.52
0.51
0.5
8.4
11
15
23
23
23
22
31
33
41
40
34
31
31
240
280
300
310
340
340
350
0.34
0.41
0.61
0.83
1
0.83
0.85

(9.448)
(9.854)
(1676)
(1787)
(1581)
(1786)
(1889)
(1475)
(2485)
(2795)
(1793)
(26120)
(28120)
(32130)
(2.113)
(3.312)
(414)
(517)
(5.619)
(5.920)
(6.221)
(3.427)
(5.924)
(5.920)
(4.415)
(413)
(3.512)
(3.412)
(3.614)
(3.814)
(5.821)
(7.627)
(7.224)
(6.923)
(6.422)
(5.121)
(7.225)
(7.225)
(8.127)
(7.525)
(6.923)
(6.321)
(5.231)
(1140)
(1758)
(1967)
(1759)
(1759)
(1759)
(0.472.4)
(0.62.1)
(0.642.3)
(0.632.2)
(0.632.3)
(0.612.2)
(0.612.2)
(2.412)
(3.412)
(5.820)
(8.429)
(828)
(8.127)
(7.927)
(5.526)
(1037)
(1658)
(2382)
(2380)
(2278)
(2277)
(0.31.5)
(0.321.1)
(0.280.98)
(0.270.95)
(0.240.85)
(0.240.83)
(0.230.81)
(3.416)
(4.918)
(6.526)
(1038)
(1038)
(9.938)
(9.537)
(1260)
(1558)
(1968)
(1866)
(1555)
(1350)
(1250)
(110400)
(130460)
(140480)
(150500)
(160540)
(160550)
(160560)
(0.0850.59)
(0.120.71)
(0.211)
(0.341.4)
(0.381.8)
(0.291.4)
(0.361.4)

RATE

101
101
135
142
126
134
136
361
431
417
324
375
389
411
128
129
132
139
142
145
149
820
830
705
521
440
400
380
86
77
102
114
97
89
82
212
249
239
232
198
179
162
123
173
224
228
196
190
185
347
328
318
286
283
273
269
210
216
326
436
393
388
376
226
323
429
508
458
435
417
172
137
107
90
75
71
68
352
391
493
645
603
575
545
244
227
245
220
177
160
156
661
634
596
546
540
537
535
90
92
117
137
158
122
121

(37188)
(35192)
(51249)
(53264)
(45235)
(49247)
(50250)
(135724)
(201704)
(194684)
(102563)
(142642)
(150661)
(168688)
(44264)
(59215)
(62217)
(65229)
(67231)
(69236)
(71241)
(2491970)
(3741516)
(3361136)
(233823)
(206680)
(178625)
(172592)
(38151)
(35132)
(47175)
(53191)
(47156)
(43142)
(39131)
(92379)
(118411)
(113387)
(112369)
(94314)
(84283)
(75256)
(43253)
(81284)
(107368)
(108379)
(91317)
(88308)
(86299)
(136686)
(151539)
(146521)
(134470)
(130466)
(125449)
(123443)
(81419)
(103366)
(158538)
(209718)
(189650)
(188633)
(179618)
(92436)
(148535)
(200710)
(234836)
(214754)
(204717)
(197684)
(69334)
(64225)
(49175)
(42147)
(35122)
(33116)
(32111)
(141667)
(178642)
(208816)
(2841067)
(268999)
(252955)
(235908)
(98476)
(105393)
(117408)
(102364)
(77288)
(68258)
(63255)
(3031089)
(2971037)
(282962)
(257873)
(253861)
(250852)
(250850)
(23157)
(27159)
(40200)
(56225)
(58265)
(42205)
(52197)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

17
19
27
30
29
31
32
21
27
35
45
53
55
58
3.7
4.5
5.5
6.8
7.7
8
8.3
7.4
14
16
14
12
11
10
6.1
6.3
8.5
10
9.9
9.4
9
8.3
10
11
12
12
11
11
9.8
16
26
35
35
35
35
0.61
0.66
0.7
0.72
0.73
0.73
0.73
4.3
7
11
15
14
14
14
7.5
13
22
31
31
31
31
0.37
0.34
0.32
0.29
0.28
0.28
0.27
4
6.7
11
15
15
15
15
19
27
33
33
30
29
27
120
140
160
190
200
210
220
0.3
0.35
0.52
0.67
0.83
0.81
0.94

(1222)
(1425)
(1935)
(2240)
(2139)
(2341)
(2342)
(1332)
(2233)
(2842)
(3754)
(4462)
(4665)
(4968)
(2.25.4)
(3.75.5)
(4.56.6)
(5.58.2)
(6.29.2)
(6.59.6)
(6.89.9)
(2.814)
(8.720)
(1320)
(1215)
(1113)
(9.612)
(911)
(4.58)
(4.87.9)
(6.611)
(8.313)
(8.112)
(7.911)
(7.611)
(611)
(7.912)
(9.414)
(1014)
(1013)
(9.913)
(9.512)
(6.214)
(1320)
(2132)
(2943)
(2842)
(2842)
(2842)
(0.370.91)
(0.540.8)
(0.570.84)
(0.590.87)
(0.590.88)
(0.590.87)
(0.60.87)
(2.66.3)
(5.78.4)
(9.113)
(1218)
(1217)
(1217)
(1217)
(4.611)
(1015)
(1726)
(2537)
(2537)
(2537)
(2637)
(0.230.56)
(0.280.41)
(0.260.38)
(0.240.35)
(0.230.34)
(0.230.33)
(0.220.32)
(2.56)
(5.48.1)
(9.313)
(1218)
(1218)
(1218)
(1218)
(1227)
(2034)
(2641)
(2740)
(2635)
(2533)
(2432)
(95150)
(120170)
(140190)
(160220)
(180240)
(180240)
(190250)
(0.260.34)
(0.310.4)
(0.460.59)
(0.580.75)
(0.720.93)
(0.710.92)
(0.831.1)

RATE

66
68
87
93
85
89
90
205
226
250
276
292
298
304
77
80
85
89
92
93
94
533
855
918
733
596
545
503
66
59
69
74
64
59
55
148
165
178
168
147
137
129
81
116
168
202
187
182
177
175
168
160
153
149
148
147
145
209
302
363
336
327
319
125
181
262
315
291
283
276
85
69
56
46
40
39
37
169
245
353
425
393
382
372
150
181
198
182
158
148
139
327
327
327
327
327
327
327
80
80
100
110
125
119
135

(4886)
(5090)
(63114)
(67122)
(62112)
(65117)
(65118)
(125305)
(184273)
(203301)
(226330)
(244345)
(249351)
(255356)
(47113)
(6597)
(69102)
(72107)
(75111)
(76111)
(77112)
(2041015)
(5471230)
(7321123)
(665803)
(538658)
(485610)
(448561)
(4985)
(4574)
(5387)
(5891)
(5277)
(4969)
(4664)
(107197)
(130203)
(148212)
(144195)
(128167)
(121154)
(113146)
(50117)
(95140)
(137202)
(164243)
(152225)
(149218)
(145212)
(107261)
(136202)
(130193)
(125185)
(121180)
(121177)
(120175)
(88216)
(170252)
(246364)
(296438)
(273405)
(268393)
(262381)
(76187)
(147218)
(213315)
(256379)
(237351)
(232340)
(227329)
(52127)
(5684)
(4668)
(3755)
(3349)
(3246)
(3044)
(103252)
(199295)
(297414)
(345512)
(319473)
(312459)
(305445)
(95217)
(136233)
(156245)
(148220)
(134184)
(128168)
(120160)
(261400)
(267393)
(272387)
(278380)
(281376)
(282375)
(281376)
(7091)
(7090)
(88113)
(96124)
(109141)
(105135)
(118152)

African Region

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

123

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%
MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)

Eritrea

Ethiopia

Gabon

Gambia

Ghana

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

Kenya

Lesotho

Liberia

Madagascar

Malawi

Mali

Mauritania

Mauritius

124

YEAR

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

3
3
4
4
5
5
5
48
57
66
74
79
81
83
<1
1
1
1
1
1
2
<1
1
1
2
2
2
2
15
17
19
22
23
24
24
6
8
8
9
10
10
10
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
23
27
31
36
38
39
41
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
4
4
4
11
13
15
18
20
20
21
9
10
11
13
14
14
15
9
10
11
13
14
15
15
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
1
1
1
1
1
1
1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.19
0.53
0.17
0.23
0.47
0.56
0.63
7.5
18
27
33
32
30
29
0.2
0.2
0.27
0.42
0.64
0.82
1.1
0.34
0.44
0.47
0.61
0.74
0.75
0.84
5.3
4.8
4.8
3.8
2.8
2.5
2.1
1.4
2
2.8
4
5
5.6
5.9
0.19
0.17
0.35
0.32
0.36
0.39
0.41
5.1
3.4
5.6
6.5
7.1
7.5
6.9
0.23
0.22
0.32
0.3
0.25
0.29
0.29
0.81
1
1.6
1.5
1.9
1.9
1.9
4.7
4.2
6.3
8.1
9.8
10
11
3.3
3
3.1
2.5
2.2
1.9
1.7
3.6
3.8
2.6
1.1
1
1.3
1.5
0.36
0.78
1.4
2
2.4
2.6
2.7
0.014
0.014
<0.01
0.015
0.016
0.017
0.013

(0.140.24)
(0.370.71)
(0.120.23)
(0.120.48)
(0.210.89)
(0.320.89)
(0.370.96)
(4.612)
(1423)
(2232)
(2739)
(2639)
(2436)
(2335)
(0.0840.38)
(0.120.29)
(0.150.44)
(0.250.64)
(0.380.98)
(0.541.2)
(0.741.4)
(0.160.61)
(0.320.59)
(0.320.65)
(0.420.84)
(0.530.99)
(0.540.99)
(0.621.1)
(1.911)
(29.1)
(2.57.9)
(2.35.8)
(23.8)
(1.93.2)
(1.62.8)
(0.562.6)
(1.23)
(1.93.9)
(2.95.3)
(3.76.6)
(4.37)
(4.57.4)
(0.0880.38)
(0.10.3)
(0.240.49)
(0.20.49)
(0.230.55)
(0.250.58)
(0.260.6)
(3.76.7)
(2.24.9)
(3.48.5)
(3.811)
(5.39.2)
(6.19.1)
(4.99.4)
(0.130.46)
(0.120.42)
(0.160.6)
(0.150.63)
(0.170.4)
(0.180.45)
(0.190.45)
(0.381.5)
(0.791.3)
(1.32)
(1.12)
(1.32.5)
(1.42.6)
(1.42.6)
(2.57.6)
(35.6)
(4.58.4)
(5.911)
(7.113)
(7.614)
(8.114)
(1.55.9)
(1.84.5)
(1.74.9)
(1.34.2)
(1.72.7)
(1.62.2)
(1.42.1)
(2.35.2)
(2.75.2)
(23.4)
(0.91.3)
(0.911.2)
(1.21.5)
(1.31.7)
(0.20.93)
(0.51.2)
(0.991.8)
(1.62.6)
(1.93)
(23.2)
(2.23.4)
(<0.010.024)
(0.010.018)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0150.015)
(0.0160.016)
(0.0170.017)
(<0.010.016)

RATEa

6
17
4.7
5.2
9.5
11
12
15
32
40
44
40
37
35
21
18
22
30
44
56
70
35
39
36
41
45
44
49
36
28
25
18
12
10
8.7
24
27
33
44
53
57
59
19
15
28
23
25
26
27
22
12
18
18
18
19
17
14
12
16
15
12
13
13
38
49
58
48
51
50
48
41
32
41
46
50
51
53
35
30
27
20
16
13
11
41
39
23
8.2
7.1
8.7
9.7
18
34
52
67
73
77
79
1.3
1.2
<1
1.2
1.3
1.3
<1

(4.47.5)
(1222)
(3.36.4)
(2.711)
(4.318)
(6.418)
(7.118)
(9.626)
(2540)
(3349)
(3753)
(3348)
(3044)
(2842)
(941)
(1127)
(1236)
(1847)
(2668)
(3680)
(4996)
(1664)
(2852)
(2550)
(2856)
(3261)
(3259)
(3663)
(1372)
(1254)
(1341)
(1127)
(8.716)
(7.813)
(6.412)
(9.846)
(1640)
(2346)
(3258)
(3969)
(4472)
(4675)
(8.737)
(8.926)
(2039)
(1435)
(1538)
(1739)
(1740)
(1629)
(8.118)
(1127)
(1131)
(1424)
(1623)
(1223)
(8.128)
(6.823)
(8.231)
(7.530)
(7.919)
(8.621)
(8.521)
(1868)
(3863)
(4572)
(3564)
(3669)
(3567)
(3465)
(2267)
(2343)
(2954)
(3361)
(3766)
(3868)
(3969)
(1663)
(1846)
(1643)
(1033)
(1219)
(1115)
(9.514)
(2660)
(2753)
(1730)
(6.99.8)
(6.38)
(7.79.8)
(8.211)
(1047)
(2250)
(3868)
(5185)
(5793)
(6096)
(6299)
(<12.3)
(<11.6)
(<1<1)
(1.21.2)
(1.21.3)
(1.31.3)
(<11.3)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

3.8
10
4.4
4
5.6
6.2
6.7
110
180
260
340
340
330
330
2.1
2.2
3.3
4.9
7.2
8.6
10
3.2
4.2
4.8
6.1
7.1
7.2
8
46
45
44
37
31
28
26
12
18
25
36
45
50
52
2.3
2.4
3.5
3.7
4.2
4.4
4.6
47
43
81
110
120
120
110
3.5
4.6
7.1
8.5
8.7
8.7
8.7
7.7
9
14
15
18
19
19
41
43
60
77
91
96
100
34
34
38
34
30
27
26
30
32
23
11
12
14
15
5.5
8.6
13
18
21
22
23
0.55
0.55
0.52
0.53
0.52
0.5
0.5

(0.976.9)
(2.220)
(1.37.8)
(1.47.1)
(2.210)
(2.811)
(3.112)
(33190)
(84290)
(120410)
(160530)
(150540)
(140520)
(140520)
(0.774.2)
(0.993.6)
(1.55.7)
(2.38.1)
(3.412)
(4.114)
(4.917)
(1.26.4)
(1.96.9)
(2.17.9)
(2.810)
(3.312)
(3.412)
(3.813)
(15100)
(1793)
(1984)
(1765)
(1450)
(1345)
(1241)
(4.326)
(7.932)
(1243)
(1759)
(2175)
(2481)
(2585)
(0.764.4)
(0.834.2)
(1.75.8)
(1.66.2)
(1.87)
(27.3)
(2.17.6)
(2377)
(2169)
(37130)
(45180)
(51180)
(54180)
(49180)
(16.4)
(1.77.7)
(2.712)
(2.914)
(2.815)
(314)
(314)
(2.915)
(4.215)
(6.423)
(6.824)
(8.230)
(8.731)
(8.731)
(1678)
(1969)
(2798)
(36130)
(42150)
(45160)
(47160)
(1564)
(1757)
(1863)
(1657)
(1546)
(1441)
(1339)
(1354)
(1456)
(1138)
(5.518)
(5.518)
(6.621)
(7.424)
(1.311)
(3.614)
(621)
(8.429)
(9.634)
(1036)
(1138)
(0.221.1)
(0.260.9)
(0.240.85)
(0.240.87)
(0.240.85)
(0.230.83)
(0.230.82)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATE

121
318
120
89
113
122
128
219
315
403
458
432
406
394
227
199
270
355
498
580
676
335
369
367
405
435
427
460
311
263
231
172
133
119
106
212
238
304
399
474
509
525
224
213
284
271
286
295
303
202
157
260
313
301
300
283
215
255
362
413
409
405
402
362
428
487
459
489
490
476
360
324
388
431
467
479
489
361
348
335
265
217
189
174
344
326
206
87
81
93
101
277
375
485
587
630
655
670
52
49
43
42
40
39
39

(31219)
(69612)
(36213)
(32159)
(45211)
(55210)
(59219)
(68383)
(146501)
(189632)
(211716)
(194677)
(178643)
(173623)
(83449)
(91332)
(121459)
(165594)
(232838)
(280960)
(3261113)
(128664)
(169608)
(165607)
(185669)
(203712)
(201693)
(217744)
(101703)
(98550)
(98436)
(79300)
(62213)
(56187)
(48168)
(74454)
(105429)
(140517)
(189657)
(224780)
(243827)
(250850)
(75433)
(74371)
(133469)
(120453)
(127478)
(135490)
(138502)
(97329)
(76250)
(119419)
(128519)
(134471)
(137463)
(122448)
(61393)
(95426)
(137602)
(141700)
(132687)
(141671)
(138665)
(137718)
(199699)
(226798)
(215750)
(224807)
(226803)
(218776)
(144693)
(146528)
(178640)
(199707)
(217765)
(223783)
(228794)
(155687)
(169578)
(158560)
(122445)
(108330)
(94285)
(85263)
(145623)
(144568)
(97336)
(42134)
(38125)
(44142)
(48155)
(67560)
(159630)
(226794)
(275957)
(2931034)
(3031070)
(3091093)
(21102)
(2279)
(2071)
(1969)
(1966)
(1864)
(1863)

2.3
2.5
3.1
4.1
4.8
5
5.3
83
100
150
200
220
210
220
1.4
1.7
3.1
4.5
6.6
7.4
8.3
1.8
2.3
2.9
3.7
4.3
4.5
4.7
23
28
29
26
23
22
21
6.9
12
17
23
29
31
33
1.6
2
2.4
2.9
3.3
3.4
3.5
33
46
89
130
130
120
120
3
5.8
11
13
14
14
14
4.2
4.6
6.9
8.5
10
11
12
20
26
33
43
50
53
55
31
46
52
45
38
35
33
14
18
14
8
8.6
9.7
10
4.5
5.8
7.3
9.3
11
11
12
0.29
0.3
0.29
0.29
0.28
0.28
0.28

(1.43.4)
(23)
(2.53.8)
(3.54.9)
(3.95.8)
(4.16)
(4.36.3)
(7098)
(91120)
(140170)
(190220)
(200230)
(200230)
(200230)
(0.912)
(1.42)
(2.53.7)
(3.65.4)
(5.37.9)
(6.18.9)
(6.810)
(1.12.7)
(1.92.8)
(2.43.5)
(34.5)
(3.55.2)
(3.75.4)
(3.95.6)
(9.941)
(1645)
(1843)
(1933)
(1927)
(1925)
(1824)
(4.210)
(9.514)
(1420)
(1928)
(2435)
(2537)
(2740)
(1.12.2)
(1.62.4)
(1.92.9)
(2.43.5)
(2.73.9)
(2.84.1)
(2.94.2)
(2837)
(4250)
(8395)
(120140)
(120130)
(120130)
(120130)
(2.24)
(5.16.6)
(9.512)
(1116)
(1215)
(1216)
(1216)
(2.66.3)
(3.75.5)
(5.68.3)
(6.910)
(8.412)
(913)
(9.614)
(1230)
(2131)
(2740)
(3552)
(4160)
(4363)
(4566)
(2141)
(3854)
(4362)
(3754)
(3443)
(3338)
(3035)
(9.719)
(1423)
(1217)
(7.68.4)
(8.39)
(9.210)
(9.911)
(2.86.8)
(4.76.9)
(68.8)
(7.611)
(8.713)
(9.113)
(9.614)
(0.180.44)
(0.240.36)
(0.240.35)
(0.230.35)
(0.230.34)
(0.230.34)
(0.230.34)

RATE

72
78
85
92
97
99
100
173
182
235
276
271
265
261
153
155
248
326
452
502
553
185
204
225
248
263
269
273
155
167
152
119
99
92
86
119
154
200
259
302
318
334
158
174
192
211
224
229
233
139
169
286
359
332
312
298
184
323
553
639
635
634
633
199
219
242
266
283
288
293
177
196
217
241
256
261
266
326
462
467
354
273
243
219
163
185
124
61
60
65
68
228
251
277
305
324
330
337
28
26
24
23
22
22
22

(44107)
(6494)
(69102)
(78108)
(79117)
(81118)
(82120)
(145203)
(159205)
(212259)
(252301)
(248294)
(243287)
(240282)
(98219)
(127186)
(201300)
(265393)
(368545)
(410602)
(454662)
(113275)
(166246)
(183272)
(202299)
(214318)
(220322)
(225327)
(67280)
(91266)
(95222)
(88155)
(83116)
(81103)
(7597)
(73177)
(126186)
(163241)
(211312)
(246364)
(259382)
(274400)
(106219)
(141209)
(156231)
(172255)
(182270)
(187275)
(191279)
(121159)
(155184)
(267305)
(338380)
(316348)
(299325)
(286311)
(134241)
(282368)
(483628)
(533754)
(552725)
(551723)
(551721)
(121295)
(178264)
(197291)
(217321)
(230341)
(236345)
(241350)
(108264)
(163233)
(177262)
(196290)
(208308)
(213314)
(219319)
(228441)
(382550)
(385556)
(291423)
(242306)
(227260)
(203237)
(112223)
(142234)
(103148)
(5864)
(5762)
(6268)
(6471)
(139339)
(204303)
(225334)
(249368)
(264390)
(270397)
(276404)
(1741)
(2131)
(2029)
(1928)
(1827)
(1826)
(1826)

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Mozambique

Namibia

Niger

Nigeria

Rwanda

Sao Tome and


Principe

Senegal

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

South Africa

Swaziland

Togo

Uganda

United Republic
of Tanzania

Zambia

Zimbabwe

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

14
16
18
21
22
23
23
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
8
9
11
13
14
15
16
98
110
124
140
151
154
158
7
6
8
9
10
10
11
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7
8
10
11
12
12
12
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
4
4
5
6
6
6
37
41
45
48
49
50
50
<1
<1
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
5
5
6
6
6
18
21
24
28
31
32
33
25
30
34
39
42
44
45
8
9
10
11
12
13
13
10
12
13
13
12
12
13

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

11
13
12
11
11
9.7
11
2.1
1.9
1.5
1.2
0.89
0.69
0.58
2.1
3
3.6
4.3
5.1
5.4
5.7
31
34
44
45
34
31
33
4.3
3.2
3.2
1.7
1.2
1.3
1.2
0.032
0.037
0.026
0.015
0.027
0.024
0.022
2.9
3.6
4.7
6
6.9
7.2
7.7
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
2.3
2.7
3.6
5.9
7.2
7.7
8.6
14
12
19
28
25
26
25
0.27
0.21
0.32
0.36
0.4
0.39
0.38
3.1
3.4
4.3
5.1
5.8
6.1
6.4
11
10
9.9
7.3
6.1
5.3
5.1
8
6
5.9
5.8
5.4
5.5
5.8
5
4.1
3.4
2.4
2.5
2.6
2.6
2.9
1.6
2.1
3.4
3.7
4
3.4

(1.733)
(3.630)
(4.624)
(5.120)
(6.317)
(5.815)
(717)
(1.52.9)
(1.32.5)
(0.992.2)
(0.691.9)
(0.711.1)
(0.341.3)
(0.450.75)
(13.5)
(2.33.8)
(2.74.5)
(3.35.6)
(3.86.6)
(4.16.9)
(4.47.3)
(1.5120)
(2.9110)
(4.1140)
(6.3130)
(981)
(1455)
(1168)
(1.68.4)
(1.45.7)
(1.85.2)
(1.52)
(1.11.5)
(11.6)
(0.931.5)
(0.0150.058)
(0.0280.048)
(0.0170.037)
(<0.010.024)
(0.0190.038)
(0.0160.034)
(0.0140.032)
(1.45)
(2.64.7)
(3.56.1)
(4.57.7)
(5.38.8)
(5.59.2)
(69.6)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1.43.5)
(2.13.4)
(2.84.6)
(4.57.4)
(5.59.1)
(5.99.7)
(6.711)
(6.127)
(6.918)
(1228)
(1742)
(1441)
(1640)
(1638)
(0.110.55)
(0.110.36)
(0.150.57)
(0.160.68)
(0.280.56)
(0.260.56)
(0.240.56)
(1.94.7)
(2.74.2)
(3.45.2)
(4.16.3)
(4.67.2)
(4.97.4)
(5.27.8)
(4.819)
(4.718)
(4.717)
(3.712)
(4.28.4)
(3.47.6)
(3.37.3)
(610)
(3.98.7)
(3.69)
(3.78.6)
(4.46.5)
(4.56.7)
(4.76.9)
(1.810)
(2.56)
(1.95.6)
(1.24.5)
(23.2)
(23.4)
(23.3)
(1.15.6)
(0.583.4)
(0.774.5)
(1.56.5)
(2.35.5)
(2.75.5)
(2.15.1)

RATEa

84
84
68
53
49
42
49
150
113
80
57
40
31
25
26
33
33
33
35
36
37
32
31
36
32
23
20
21
61
58
40
19
12
12
11
28
29
18
9.7
17
15
13
40
43
50
55
59
60
62
<1
3.4
1.8
2.5
2.4
2.4
1.7
59
70
87
114
127
134
146
37
28
43
58
51
52
50
31
22
30
32
35
33
32
85
84
89
95
101
103
106
60
50
41
26
19
16
15
32
20
17
15
13
13
13
64
45
34
21
20
21
20
27
14
17
27
30
32
27

(12242)
(22189)
(25133)
(2594)
(2877)
(2564)
(3074)
(105203)
(82149)
(52115)
(3390)
(3250)
(1559)
(2033)
(1345)
(2641)
(2542)
(2543)
(2645)
(2746)
(2847)
(1.5121)
(2.797)
(3.3110)
(4.594)
(654)
(9.236)
(7.243)
(23118)
(26103)
(2264)
(1621)
(1115)
(9.715)
(8.714)
(1350)
(2237)
(1226)
(5.816)
(1224)
(9.821)
(8.419)
(2069)
(3156)
(3764)
(4271)
(4575)
(4576)
(4877)
(<11.1)
(2.54.3)
(1.12.7)
(2.52.6)
(2.42.5)
(2.42.5)
(<12.7)
(3589)
(5588)
(67110)
(88144)
(98162)
(103170)
(113183)
(1774)
(1744)
(2762)
(3589)
(2984)
(3280)
(3175)
(1264)
(1237)
(1454)
(1461)
(2448)
(2248)
(2047)
(51128)
(67103)
(71109)
(75116)
(80125)
(83126)
(86129)
(27108)
(2289)
(1972)
(1343)
(1327)
(1124)
(9.922)
(2441)
(1329)
(1126)
(9.622)
(1015)
(1015)
(1115)
(23128)
(2967)
(1955)
(1139)
(1626)
(1626)
(1525)
(1154)
(4.929)
(6.136)
(1252)
(1944)
(2244)
(1740)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

100
120
110
110
110
99
110
18
18
18
18
14
12
11
19
26
31
39
46
49
52
260
280
370
400
320
300
320
37
27
29
18
14
14
14
0.3
0.32
0.27
0.2
0.26
0.24
0.23
27
33
42
54
61
64
67
0.034
0.061
0.044
0.05
0.055
0.041
0.042
19
23
31
51
63
68
75
160
150
230
380
390
400
400
3
2.9
5.4
7.1
8
8.1
8.4
25
28
35
42
48
50
52
93
96
97
81
71
65
64
77
71
79
81
78
80
82
51
52
53
47
45
45
45
28
28
44
54
51
53
51

(19310)
(32290)
(38240)
(44210)
(50190)
(47170)
(54200)
(8.331)
(8.729)
(929)
(829)
(6.922)
(4.921)
(4.818)
(7.436)
(1242)
(1551)
(1864)
(2275)
(2379)
(2484)
(211000)
(27940)
(461200)
(741200)
(95800)
(120580)
(110690)
(1282)
(9.757)
(1255)
(9.227)
(7.122)
(722)
(6.621)
(0.110.6)
(0.150.53)
(0.120.45)
(0.0680.35)
(0.120.44)
(0.110.41)
(0.10.39)
(1152)
(1554)
(2069)
(2587)
(29100)
(30100)
(31110)
(<0.010.06)
(0.0280.1)
(0.0180.075)
(0.0220.083)
(0.0250.09)
(0.0170.075)
(0.0170.074)
(7.636)
(1138)
(1451)
(2483)
(30100)
(32110)
(35120)
(55300)
(65240)
(110380)
(180610)
(180640)
(190640)
(180630)
(1.16.1)
(1.34.9)
(2.39.1)
(2.712)
(3.413)
(3.313)
(3.313)
(1048)
(1246)
(1557)
(1969)
(2179)
(2282)
(2385)
(35190)
(38190)
(41190)
(37140)
(36110)
(32100)
(32100)
(38120)
(34110)
(37130)
(38130)
(37120)
(37120)
(39130)
(19110)
(2584)
(2487)
(1878)
(2169)
(2170)
(2170)
(1159)
(1151)
(1577)
(2294)
(2482)
(2584)
(2380)

RATE

742
722
600
509
488
433
491
1287
1080
969
849
651
550
492
240
278
284
300
317
326
333
265
250
298
286
215
192
199
521
487
361
192
143
138
128
258
253
189
134
166
151
141
368
395
446
492
521
527
542
48
81
56
60
64
47
48
480
595
748
982
1122
1185
1282
429
352
524
788
792
809
795
350
301
508
645
697
697
704
690
685
720
775
825
843
865
526
461
399
285
227
202
193
303
236
233
209
184
183
183
646
586
520
408
360
355
345
272
244
353
429
409
427
402

(1402255)
(2011809)
(2081326)
(212994)
(225862)
(207748)
(233844)
(5862193)
(5251760)
(4771546)
(3851377)
(311997)
(219939)
(210779)
(95467)
(128456)
(133464)
(141491)
(150516)
(153529)
(156540)
(221058)
(24857)
(381003)
(53876)
(63529)
(78378)
(70438)
(1701154)
(1731021)
(153679)
(100289)
(71217)
(68212)
(62197)
(99513)
(117416)
(82316)
(45231)
(76275)
(68252)
(62235)
(146717)
(183646)
(209728)
(231800)
(244848)
(246860)
(253879)
(1184)
(37133)
(2395)
(2799)
(29105)
(2087)
(2085)
(190909)
(274975)
(3461223)
(4571605)
(5291824)
(5591918)
(6032075)
(150829)
(158587)
(255846)
(3741270)
(3581288)
(3721287)
(3641264)
(126702)
(136507)
(212859)
(2471085)
(2931109)
(2861118)
(2811134)
(2731305)
(3051132)
(3151192)
(3471273)
(3671365)
(3771390)
(3861418)
(1951086)
(183925)
(171772)
(131509)
(113360)
(99323)
(95306)
(148485)
(115379)
(108378)
(97336)
(87283)
(86282)
(87281)
(2451351)
(283942)
(232851)
(160681)
(166557)
(165548)
(159534)
(107559)
(90436)
(123619)
(174749)
(194657)
(203673)
(185639)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

54
76
93
110
120
120
130
9.8
14
20
21
17
15
14
9.7
13
17
22
26
27
29
130
150
210
240
220
200
210
29
22
23
15
12
12
11
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
14
18
23
28
33
34
36
0.031
0.03
0.029
0.028
0.027
0.027
0.027
8.2
11
16
26
34
37
40
110
130
260
440
470
480
490
2.3
3.2
8.5
13
14
15
15
11
14
18
22
25
26
27
110
110
100
87
76
73
70
58
68
80
83
80
79
79
56
70
73
65
62
61
61
31
56
91
100
89
83
80

(7.2150)
(23160)
(40170)
(61170)
(77170)
(84170)
(87170)
(7.413)
(1217)
(1823)
(1924)
(1619)
(1416)
(1315)
(5.914)
(1015)
(1420)
(1826)
(2131)
(2233)
(2434)
(0.48560)
(5.3540)
(11710)
(27700)
(76430)
(120310)
(99360)
(1253)
(1137)
(1534)
(1416)
(1113)
(1113)
(1013)
(0.0960.23)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(8.621)
(1522)
(1827)
(2334)
(2739)
(2841)
(2943)
(0.0190.046)
(0.0240.036)
(0.0230.035)
(0.0230.034)
(0.0220.033)
(0.0220.032)
(0.0220.032)
(512)
(8.913)
(1319)
(2132)
(2841)
(3044)
(3348)
(75150)
(110160)
(210310)
(360530)
(390570)
(400580)
(400590)
(1.43.4)
(2.63.9)
(710)
(1015)
(1117)
(1218)
(1318)
(6.917)
(1117)
(1522)
(1827)
(2130)
(2132)
(2233)
(57180)
(61180)
(62160)
(62120)
(6095)
(5989)
(5685)
(4967)
(5878)
(7091)
(7689)
(7586)
(7485)
(7585)
(4963)
(6477)
(6778)
(5971)
(5668)
(5568)
(5567)
(1650)
(3977)
(71110)
(79120)
(69110)
(64110)
(61100)

RATE

401
478
513
524
535
539
544
696
862
1077
1028
793
682
603
125
138
152
168
178
181
185
128
139
172
175
145
130
133
405
394
286
162
123
115
106
135
124
114
105
99
98
96
195
215
237
261
277
282
288
43
40
37
33
32
31
31
207
279
377
509
608
644
682
301
317
576
925
960
971
981
267
337
803
1147
1227
1257
1287
308
339
374
413
438
446
455
624
542
427
304
244
226
209
226
226
236
213
190
183
177
710
788
713
566
500
482
462
296
483
726
799
716
668
633

(531091)
(1441008)
(220929)
(293819)
(347763)
(368743)
(374746)
(525890)
(7231012)
(9381225)
(9161145)
(729860)
(637727)
(563643)
(76186)
(112166)
(124183)
(136202)
(145214)
(148217)
(152221)
(<1579)
(4.8489)
(8.6571)
(19498)
(51288)
(77198)
(63228)
(169740)
(193665)
(181415)
(149176)
(114132)
(102128)
(94118)
(82201)
(101150)
(93137)
(88123)
(81120)
(80117)
(79115)
(118289)
(175259)
(193285)
(212315)
(225334)
(231339)
(237345)
(2664)
(3248)
(3044)
(2740)
(2638)
(2638)
(2537)
(126308)
(227337)
(307454)
(414613)
(495733)
(526774)
(560816)
(204416)
(258382)
(468694)
(7531115)
(7811157)
(7941165)
(8061173)
(163397)
(274406)
(654968)
(9341381)
(9981479)
(10281508)
(10581538)
(187457)
(276409)
(304451)
(336497)
(356527)
(364536)
(373545)
(3211025)
(291869)
(256642)
(218405)
(191303)
(181275)
(168254)
(192262)
(192262)
(206269)
(196229)
(178203)
(171195)
(166189)
(623803)
(718862)
(660768)
(518616)
(452551)
(433533)
(417510)
(156482)
(332662)
(570901)
(630988)
(554899)
(510846)
(486799)

African Region

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

125

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Algeria

Angola

Benin

Botswana

Burkina Faso

Burundi

Cameroon

Cape Verde

Central African
Republic

Chad

Comoros

Congo

Cte d'Ivoire

Democratic
Republic
of the Congo

Equatorial
Guinea

126

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

25
28
31
33
34
35
35
10
12
14
16
18
19
19
5
6
7
8
8
9
9
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
9
11
12
14
16
16
16
6
6
6
7
8
8
8
12
14
16
18
19
19
20
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
6
7
8
10
11
11
11
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
2
3
3
4
4
4
4
13
15
17
18
19
19
20
36
44
50
57
62
64
66
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

17
19
27
30
29
31
32
21
27
35
45
53
55
58
3.7
4.5
5.5
6.8
7.7
8.0
8.3
7.4
14
16
14
12
11
10
6.1
6.3
8.5
10
9.9
9.4
9.0
8.3
10
11
12
12
11
11
9.8
16
26
35
35
35
35
0.61
0.66
0.70
0.72
0.73
0.73
0.73
4.3
7.0
11
15
14
14
14
7.5
13
22
31
31
31
31
0.37
0.34
0.32
0.29
0.28
0.28
0.27
4.0
6.7
11
15
15
15
15
19
27
33
33
30
29
27
120
140
160
190
200
210
220
0.30
0.35
0.52
0.67
0.83
0.81
0.94

(1222)
(1425)
(1935)
(2240)
(2139)
(2341)
(2342)
(1332)
(2233)
(2842)
(3754)
(4462)
(4665)
(4968)
(2.25.4)
(3.75.5)
(4.56.6)
(5.58.2)
(6.29.2)
(6.59.6)
(6.89.9)
(2.814)
(8.720)
(1320)
(1215)
(1113)
(9.612)
(911)
(4.58)
(4.87.9)
(6.611)
(8.313)
(8.112)
(7.911)
(7.611)
(611)
(7.912)
(9.414)
(1014)
(1013)
(9.913)
(9.512)
(6.214)
(1320)
(2132)
(2943)
(2842)
(2842)
(2842)
(0.370.91)
(0.540.8)
(0.570.84)
(0.590.87)
(0.590.88)
(0.590.87)
(0.60.87)
(2.66.3)
(5.78.4)
(9.113)
(1218)
(1217)
(1217)
(1217)
(4.611)
(1015)
(1726)
(2537)
(2537)
(2537)
(2637)
(0.230.56)
(0.280.41)
(0.260.38)
(0.240.35)
(0.230.34)
(0.230.33)
(0.220.32)
(2.56)
(5.48.1)
(9.313)
(1218)
(1218)
(1218)
(1218)
(1227)
(2034)
(2641)
(2740)
(2635)
(2533)
(2432)
(95150)
(120170)
(140190)
(160220)
(180240)
(180240)
(190250)
(0.260.34)
(0.310.4)
(0.460.59)
(0.580.75)
(0.720.93)
(0.710.92)
(0.831.1)

RATEb

66
68
87
93
85
89
90
205
226
250
276
292
298
304
77
80
85
89
92
93
94
533
855
918
733
596
545
503
66
59
69
74
64
59
55
148
165
178
168
147
137
129
81
116
168
202
187
182
177
175
168
160
153
149
148
147
145
209
302
363
336
327
319
125
181
262
315
291
283
276
85
69
56
46
40
39
37
169
245
353
425
393
382
372
150
181
198
182
158
148
139
327
327
327
327
327
327
327
80
80
100
110
125
119
135

(4886)
(5090)
(63114)
(67122)
(62112)
(65117)
(65118)
(125305)
(184273)
(203301)
(226330)
(244345)
(249351)
(255356)
(47113)
(6597)
(69102)
(72107)
(75111)
(76111)
(77112)
(2041015)
(5471230)
(7321123)
(665803)
(538658)
(485610)
(448561)
(4985)
(4574)
(5387)
(5891)
(5277)
(4969)
(4664)
(107197)
(130203)
(148212)
(144195)
(128167)
(121154)
(113146)
(50117)
(95140)
(137202)
(164243)
(152225)
(149218)
(145212)
(107261)
(136202)
(130193)
(125185)
(121180)
(121177)
(120175)
(88216)
(170252)
(246364)
(296438)
(273405)
(268393)
(262381)
(76187)
(147218)
(213315)
(256379)
(237351)
(232340)
(227329)
(52127)
(5684)
(4668)
(3755)
(3349)
(3246)
(3044)
(103252)
(199295)
(297414)
(345512)
(319473)
(312459)
(305445)
(95217)
(136233)
(156245)
(148220)
(134184)
(128168)
(120160)
(261400)
(267393)
(272387)
(278380)
(281376)
(282375)
(281376)
(7091)
(7090)
(88113)
(96124)
(109141)
(105135)
(118152)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.16
0.35
0.42
0.49
0.54
0.62
2.0
3.0
3.9
4.7
5.0
5.2
0.072
0.57
0.92
1.1
1.3
1.3
1.3
1.7
7.6
11
9.3
7.8
7.2
6.5
2.5
2.5
2.8
2.7
2.2
1.9
1.6
1.6
2.6
3
3.1
2.8
2.6
2.5
0.6
5.1
10
14
14
14
14

(0.0810.29)
(0.180.59)
(0.220.71)
(0.250.81)
(0.280.89)
(0.161.4)
(1.22.9)
(24.2)
(2.75.5)
(3.26.4)
(2.87.8)
(3.77.1)
(<0.010.61)
(0.251)
(0.611.3)
(0.741.5)
(1.11.6)
(1.11.6)
(11.5)
(0.643.3)
(4.811)
(8.413)
(8.410)
(7.18.7)
(6.48)
(5.87.3)
(1.73.6)
(1.73.5)
(1.83.9)
(1.93.7)
(1.82.6)
(1.62.2)
(1.41.9)
(1.12.3)
(23.4)
(2.33.8)
(2.43.8)
(2.23.4)
(2.13.3)
(2.22.8)
(0.0591.8)
(3.76.6)
(7.713)
(1118)
(1217)
(1217)
(1117)

0.034 (0.0180.057)

1.1
3.5
5.7
6.7
5.7
5.5
5.3
0.84
2.4
5.6
9
9.2
9.2
9.2
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.38
0.6
0.93
1.2
1.2
1.2
1.2
3
9.5
12
11
8.9
8.6
6.7
9.2
11
12
15
16
17
18
<0.01
0.015
0.061
0.1
0.046
0.21
0.45

(0.471.9)
(2.64.5)
(4.47.2)
(5.18.4)
(4.37.3)
(4.27)
(46.8)
(0.331.6)
(1.43.8)
(3.87.8)
(6.612)
(6.512)
(6.413)
(6.412)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.016)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.220.59)
(0.450.78)
(0.71.2)
(0.91.6)
(0.891.6)
(0.881.5)
(0.961.4)
(0.96.4)
(6.513)
(9.116)
(8.114)
(7.510)
(7.59.8)
(5.77.6)
(6.213)
(7.515)
(8.517)
(1020)
(9.225)
(1223)
(1324)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.025)
(0.040.087)
(0.0740.14)
(0.0320.061)
(0.160.27)
(0.380.52)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<1
1.1
1.2
1.4
1.5
6.0
16
21
24
26
27
27
1.5
10
14
14
16
15
15
125
478
604
498
402
362
326
27
24
22
19
14
12
9.8
29
43
47
42
35
32
29
4.9
36
65
80
75
74
71

NUMBER

RATEb

11 607
13 507
18 572
21 336
20 588
21 701
22 336
10 271
5 143
16 062
37 175
44 576
41 221
44 655
2 074
2 400
2 697
3 270
3 872
3 878
3 756
2 938
5 665
9 292
10 058
8 891
8 362
7 013
1 497
2 572
2 331
3 478
4 238
4 716
4 800
4 575
3 326
6 421
6 585
6 808
7 277
7 611
5 892
3 292
5 251
21 499
24 622
24 662
24 073
221
303

46
48
61
65
60
62
63
99
42
115
225
247
222
234
43
42
41
43
46
45
42
213
357
529
536
455
422
349
16
24
19
24
27
30
29
82
55
101
91
86
89
91
48
24
33
122
131
129
123
63
77

292
334
332
356
2 124
3 339

62
69
68
72
72
100

3 210
6 803
8 743
6 643
2 591
3 186

80
161
202
151
43
46

6 311
6 912
8 411
9 452
140
123
120
111
132
120
123
591
3 615
9 239
9 853
8 886
9 765
10 150
7 841
11 988
15 094
19 681
23 688
22 571
22 708
21 131
42 819
61 024
97 075
104 861
111 709
114 170
260
306

64
65
77
84
32
25
21
17
19
17
17
25
132
295
279
232
248
251
63
82
91
109
125
117
115
58
97
123
169
168
174
173
70
69

718
707
820

108
104
117

(<1<1)
(<11.8)
(<12.1)
(<12.3)
(<12.5)
(1.514)
(9.724)
(1430)
(1633)
(1835)
(1542)
(1937)
(<113)
(4.518)
(9.420)
(9.719)
(1319)
(1218)
(1217)
(46241)
(305690)
(479744)
(446553)
(362443)
(323404)
(290364)
(1839)
(1633)
(1531)
(1326)
(1217)
(1014)
(8.312)
(2041)
(3256)
(3659)
(3353)
(2743)
(2540)
(2633)
(<114)
(2748)
(4982)
(61102)
(6290)
(6088)
(5884)

7.2 (3.712)

36
104
155
166
135
127
120
14
35
69
92
86
84
82
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
16
22
30
35
31
30
29
24
65
74
59
47
45
34
25
25
25
25
26
26
27
1.1
3.3
12
17
6.9
31
64

(1664)
(78134)
(120195)
(128209)
(103171)
(97162)
(91154)
(5.526)
(2054)
(4795)
(67120)
(61116)
(59114)
(57111)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<12.5)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(9.125)
(1629)
(2238)
(2645)
(2341)
(2239)
(2435)
(7.251)
(4489)
(5595)
(4576)
(4054)
(3951)
(2939)
(1735)
(1734)
(1734)
(1834)
(1541)
(1935)
(1936)
(<11.7)
(1.65.7)
(7.717)
(1223)
(4.99.3)
(2340)
(5575)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

70
70
70
70
70
70
70
48
19
46
82
85
75
77
57
53
49
48
50
49
45
40
42
58
73
76
77
70
24
41
27
33
43
50
53
55
33
56
54
58
65
70
60
20
20
61
70
71
69
36
46

40
46
46
49
50
48

22
48
62
47
34
25

20
22
27
31
37
36
38
38
47
43
45
15
54
83
66
59
65
68
42
45
46
60
79
79
83
18
30
38
52
51
53
53
87
87

87
87
87

(5396)
(5396)
(5396)
(5396)
(5396)
(5396)
(5396)
(3380)
(1623)
(3857)
(68100)
(72101)
(6389)
(6692)
(3892)
(4465)
(4160)
(4059)
(4262)
(4159)
(3855)
(21104)
(2965)
(4772)
(6781)
(6985)
(6987)
(6278)
(1933)
(3353)
(2235)
(2742)
(3652)
(4360)
(4563)
(4177)
(2742)
(4868)
(4763)
(5167)
(5874)
(6280)
(4196)
(1725)
(1725)
(5075)
(5886)
(5987)
(5885)
(2459)
(3856)
(3350)
(3856)
(3856)
(4160)
(3482)
(4059)
(1827)
(4059)
(5276)
(4058)
(2356)
(2131)
(1725)
(1827)
(2333)
(2637)
(2561)
(3044)
(3147)
(3146)
(3958)
(3653)
(3855)
(1024)
(4566)
(7199)
(5481)
(4973)
(5479)
(5682)
(2966)
(3560)
(3758)
(5074)
(6893)
(6991)
(7296)
(1522)
(2536)
(3245)
(4561)
(4560)
(4662)
(4661)
(7799)
(7799)

(7799)
(7799)
(7799)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV

Eritrea

Ethiopia

Gabon

Gambia

Ghana

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

Kenya

Lesotho

Liberia

Madagascar

Malawi

Mali

Mauritania

Mauritius

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

3
3
4
4
5
5
5
48
57
66
74
79
81
83
<1
1
1
1
1
1
2
<1
1
1
2
2
2
2
15
17
19
22
23
24
24
6
8
8
9
10
10
10
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
23
27
31
36
38
39
41
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
4
4
4
11
13
15
18
20
20
21
9
10
11
13
14
14
15
9
10
11
13
14
15
15
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
1
1
1
1
1
1
1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

2.3
2.5
3.1
4.1
4.8
5.0
5.3
83
100
150
200
220
210
220
1.4
1.7
3.1
4.5
6.6
7.4
8.3
1.8
2.3
2.9
3.7
4.3
4.5
4.7
23
28
29
26
23
22
21
6.9
12
17
23
29
31
33
1.6
2.0
2.4
2.9
3.3
3.4
3.5
33
46
89
130
130
120
120
3.0
5.8
11
13
14
14
14
4.2
4.6
6.9
8.5
10
11
12
20
26
33
43
50
53
55
31
46
52
45
38
35
33
14
18
14
8
8.6
9.7
10
4.5
5.8
7.3
9.3
11
11
12
0.29
0.3
0.29
0.29
0.28
0.28
0.28

(1.43.4)
(23)
(2.53.8)
(3.54.9)
(3.95.8)
(4.16)
(4.36.3)
(7098)
(91120)
(140170)
(190220)
(200230)
(200230)
(200230)
(0.912)
(1.42)
(2.53.7)
(3.65.4)
(5.37.9)
(6.18.9)
(6.810)
(1.12.7)
(1.92.8)
(2.43.5)
(34.5)
(3.55.2)
(3.75.4)
(3.95.6)
(9.941)
(1645)
(1843)
(1933)
(1927)
(1925)
(1824)
(4.210)
(9.514)
(1420)
(1928)
(2435)
(2537)
(2740)
(1.12.2)
(1.62.4)
(1.92.9)
(2.43.5)
(2.73.9)
(2.84.1)
(2.94.2)
(2837)
(4250)
(8395)
(120140)
(120130)
(120130)
(120130)
(2.24)
(5.16.6)
(9.512)
(1116)
(1215)
(1216)
(1216)
(2.66.3)
(3.75.5)
(5.68.3)
(6.910)
(8.412)
(913)
(9.614)
(1230)
(2131)
(2740)
(3552)
(4160)
(4363)
(4566)
(2141)
(3854)
(4362)
(3754)
(3443)
(3338)
(3035)
(9.719)
(1423)
(1217)
(7.68.4)
(8.39)
(9.210)
(9.911)
(2.86.8)
(4.76.9)
(68.8)
(7.611)
(8.713)
(9.113)
(9.614)
(0.180.44)
(0.240.36)
(0.240.35)
(0.230.35)
(0.230.34)
(0.230.34)
(0.230.34)

RATEb

72
78
85
92
97
99
100
173
182
235
276
271
265
261
153
155
248
326
452
502
553
185
204
225
248
263
269
273
155
167
152
119
99
92
86
119
154
200
259
302
318
334
158
174
192
211
224
229
233
139
169
286
359
332
312
298
184
323
553
639
635
634
633
199
219
242
266
283
288
293
177
196
217
241
256
261
266
326
462
467
354
273
243
219
163
185
124
61
60
65
68
228
251
277
305
324
330
337
28
26
24
23
22
22
22

(44107)
(6494)
(69102)
(78108)
(79117)
(81118)
(82120)
(145203)
(159205)
(212259)
(252301)
(248294)
(243287)
(240282)
(98219)
(127186)
(201300)
(265393)
(368545)
(410602)
(454662)
(113275)
(166246)
(183272)
(202299)
(214318)
(220322)
(225327)
(67280)
(91266)
(95222)
(88155)
(83116)
(81103)
(7597)
(73177)
(126186)
(163241)
(211312)
(246364)
(259382)
(274400)
(106219)
(141209)
(156231)
(172255)
(182270)
(187275)
(191279)
(121159)
(155184)
(267305)
(338380)
(316348)
(299325)
(286311)
(134241)
(282368)
(483628)
(533754)
(552725)
(551723)
(551721)
(121295)
(178264)
(197291)
(217321)
(230341)
(236345)
(241350)
(108264)
(163233)
(177262)
(196290)
(208308)
(213314)
(219319)
(228441)
(382550)
(385556)
(291423)
(242306)
(227260)
(203237)
(112223)
(142234)
(103148)
(5864)
(5762)
(6268)
(6471)
(139339)
(204303)
(225334)
(249368)
(264390)
(270397)
(276404)
(1741)
(2131)
(2029)
(1928)
(1827)
(1826)
(1826)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

0.26
0.86
1.3
1.5
1.6
1.6
1.6

(0.0420.68)
(0.481.3)
(0.841.9)
(12.2)
(0.872.5)
(12.4)
(12.4)

8.3
27
36
34
32
32
31

0.14
0.46
1.2
1.9
2.8
3.1
3.5
0.014
0.045
0.13
0.31
0.51
0.72
0.54
0.95
5.4
7.5
6.3
5.1
4.9
4.9
1.1
3.1
4.7
6.2
7.4
7.3
8.9
0.057
0.21
0.46
0.69
0.81
0.85
0.89
9.3
24
47
62
58
54
50
0.26
3.4
8.1
9.9
10
10
11
0.035
0.33
0.54
0.56
0.33
0.52
0.91
0.59
0.77
1
1.4
1.6
1.7
1.8
14
31
37
31
24
23
21
0.77
4.1
3
1.4
1.3
1.5
1.5
0.11
0.28
0.54
0.83
1
1.1
1.1
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.024
0.021
0.019

(0.0650.25)
(0.320.62)
(0.871.6)
(1.42.4)
(23.6)
(2.34)
(2.64.5)
(<0.010.1)
(<0.010.16)
(0.050.24)
(0.190.47)
(0.320.74)
(0.580.88)
(0.430.66)
(0.0553.1)
(2.69.4)
(4.312)
(4.28.8)
(4.36)
(4.35.5)
(4.35.6)
(0.0214)
(1.26)
(2.77.2)
(4.38.5)
(5.110)
(68.8)
(7.311)
(0.0210.11)
(0.130.3)
(0.320.63)
(0.490.93)
(0.581.1)
(0.611.1)
(0.641.2)
(613)
(2028)
(4054)
(5372)
(5463)
(5157)
(4555)
(0.140.41)
(2.84)
(6.99.3)
(8.212)
(8.912)
(9.112)
(9.212)
(<0.010.086)
(0.190.51)
(0.360.75)
(0.40.75)
(0.280.38)
(0.360.72)
(0.721.1)
(0.291)
(0.471.1)
(0.621.5)
(0.852.1)
(0.992.4)
(12.6)
(1.12.7)
(8.621)
(2538)
(2945)
(2437)
(2227)
(2124)
(1922)
(0.0272.7)
(26.8)
(24.2)
(11.9)
(1.21.4)
(1.41.6)
(12)
(0.0450.21)
(0.170.41)
(0.350.78)
(0.541.2)
(0.661.4)
(0.691.5)
(0.731.6)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.017)
(<0.010.044)
(<0.010.037)
(<0.010.035)

15
42
97
136
190
211
233
1.4
4
9.8
21
31
43
31
6.5
32
39
29
22
21
20
18
42
56
69
78
75
89
5.6
18
37
51
55
57
59
39
88
149
174
151
137
122
16
187
410
481
482
485
487
1.6
16
19
18
9.1
14
23
5.3
5.9
6.7
7.8
8.3
8.6
8.8
153
315
326
238
173
157
138
8.9
41
27
11
8.9
10
9.7
5.7
12
21
27
30
31
32
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.8
1.7
1.4

(1.322)
(1542)
(2351)
(2248)
(1850)
(2046)
(2045)

(727)
(3057)
(71127)
(102175)
(140248)
(158271)
(176299)
(<111)
(<114)
(3.819)
(1331)
(1945)
(3452)
(2538)
(<121)
(1555)
(2360)
(1941)
(1926)
(1823)
(1823)
(<169)
(1680)
(3286)
(4794)
(53107)
(6191)
(73106)
(2.111)
(1127)
(2551)
(3668)
(4074)
(4176)
(4278)
(2656)
(75103)
(128172)
(148202)
(140164)
(129145)
(110135)
(8.625)
(155223)
(352472)
(397574)
(420549)
(423551)
(425552)
(<14)
(8.924)
(1326)
(1324)
(7.711)
(9.319)
(1828)
(2.68.9)
(3.68.7)
(410)
(4.812)
(5.112)
(5.113)
(5.313)
(91229)
(252384)
(262397)
(190291)
(154194)
(146168)
(128149)
(<131)
(2069)
(1837)
(7.614)
(8.19.7)
(9.211)
(6.713)
(2.311)
(7.518)
(1330)
(1839)
(2043)
(2045)
(2146)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.4)
(<13.5)
(<12.9)
(<12.7)

NUMBER

3 699
21 453
6 652
3 549
2 970
2 904
2 870
88 634
26 034
91 101
124 262
141 157
148 936
154 694
917
1 115

117
668
181
79
60
57
55
183
46
139
167
178
183
186
99
103

2 512
4 540
3 073
3 473

183
313
208
231

1 023

91

2 031
2 107
2 145
2 070
6 407
8 636
10 933
12 124
14 149
14 892
14 607
1 988
3 523
5 440
6 863
10 025
8 357
11 038
1 163
1 613
1 273
1 774
2 117
2 171
2 183
11 788
28 142
64 159
102 680
99 941
102 997
99 272
2 525
5 181
9 746
10 802
12 019
12 213
11 674

135
129
128
120
43
51
57
56
61
63
60
35
47
65
76
105
86
111
114
143
103
130
146
146
144
50
103
205
288
260
261
245
154
289
496
523
565
568
538

1 393
1 500
3 432
4 970
5 918
6 597
6 261
21 616

67
53
108
136
154
165
56
165

18 993
22 034
22 758
24 432
12 395
19 155
23 604
25 491
23 929
22 674
21 092
2 933
3 087
4 216
4 704
5 989
6 611
5 291
5 284
3 849
3 067
2 162
2 698
2 640
2 461
119
131
160
125
107
115
122

106
113
113
118
132
194
210
199
171
157
142
34
31
37
36
41
44
34
265
168
116
71
82
78
71
11
12
13
10
8
9
9

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

RATEb

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

163
854
214
86
62
58
55
106
25
59
61
66
69
72
65
66

56
69
41
42

44

54
49
48
44
28
30
37
47
62
68
70
29
30
33
29
35
27
33
73
82
54
61
65
64
62
36
61
72
80
78
84
82
84
89
90
82
89
90
85

30
22
40
48
54
56
31
84

44
44
43
44
41
42
45
56
63
65
65
21
17
30
59
69
68
51
116
67
42
23
25
24
21
41
44
55
43
38
41
44

(110268)
(7091050)
(177262)
(73102)
(5176)
(4871)
(4666)
(90127)
(2229)
(5466)
(5667)
(6072)
(6476)
(6678)
(45100)
(5581)
(4769)
(5785)
(3551)
(3551)
(3755)
(4567)
(4160)
(4058)
(3753)
(1565)
(1956)
(2660)
(3664)
(5273)
(6177)
(6280)
(1948)
(2537)
(2740)
(2436)
(2943)
(2233)
(2840)
(52107)
(68101)
(4466)
(5175)
(5480)
(5378)
(5275)
(3242)
(5666)
(6777)
(7685)
(7582)
(8087)
(7986)
(64115)
(78102)
(79103)
(6998)
(78102)
(79103)
(7598)

African Region

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

(2537)
(1827)
(3450)
(4059)
(4565)
(4768)
(2151)
(71101)
(3754)
(3754)
(3653)
(3754)
(3058)
(3551)
(3855)
(4768)
(5671)
(6069)
(6070)
(1530)
(1322)
(2536)
(5662)
(6772)
(6572)
(4953)
(78191)
(5582)
(3552)
(1929)
(2131)
(2029)
(1826)
(2767)
(3754)
(4567)
(3653)
(3146)
(3450)
(3653)

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

127

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Mozambique

Namibia

Niger

Nigeria

Rwanda

Sao Tome and


Principe

Senegal

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

South Africa

Swaziland

Togo

Uganda

United Republic
of Tanzania

Zambia

Zimbabwe

128

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

14
16
18
21
22
23
23
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
8
9
11
13
14
15
16
98
110
124
140
151
154
158
7
6
8
9
10
10
11
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7
8
10
11
12
12
12
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
4
4
5
6
6
6
37
41
45
48
49
50
50
<1
<1
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
5
5
6
6
6
18
21
24
28
31
32
33
25
30
34
39
42
44
45
8
9
10
11
12
13
13
10
12
13
13
12
12
13

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

54
76
93
110
120
120
130
9.8
14
20
21
17
15
14
9.7
13
17
22
26
27
29
130
150
210
240
220
200
210
29
22
23
15
12
12
11
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
14
18
23
28
33
34
36
0.031
0.03
0.029
0.028
0.027
0.027
0.027
8.2
11
16
26
34
37
40
110
130
260
440
470
480
490
2.3
3.2
8.5
13
14
15
15
11
14
18
22
25
26
27
110
110
100
87
76
73
70
58
68
80
83
80
79
79
56
70
73
65
62
61
61
31
56
91
100
89
83
80

(7.2150)
(23160)
(40170)
(61170)
(77170)
(84170)
(87170)
(7.413)
(1217)
(1823)
(1924)
(1619)
(1416)
(1315)
(5.914)
(1015)
(1420)
(1826)
(2131)
(2233)
(2434)
(0.48560)
(5.3540)
(11710)
(27700)
(76430)
(120310)
(99360)
(1253)
(1137)
(1534)
(1416)
(1113)
(1113)
(1013)
(0.0960.23)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(0.130.19)
(8.621)
(1522)
(1827)
(2334)
(2739)
(2841)
(2943)
(0.0190.046)
(0.0240.036)
(0.0230.035)
(0.0230.034)
(0.0220.033)
(0.0220.032)
(0.0220.032)
(512)
(8.913)
(1319)
(2132)
(2841)
(3044)
(3348)
(75150)
(110160)
(210310)
(360530)
(390570)
(400580)
(400590)
(1.43.4)
(2.63.9)
(710)
(1015)
(1117)
(1218)
(1318)
(6.917)
(1117)
(1522)
(1827)
(2130)
(2132)
(2233)
(57180)
(61180)
(62160)
(62120)
(6095)
(5989)
(5685)
(4967)
(5878)
(7091)
(7689)
(7586)
(7485)
(7585)
(4963)
(6477)
(6778)
(5971)
(5668)
(5568)
(5567)
(1650)
(3977)
(71110)
(79120)
(69110)
(64110)
(61100)

RATEb

401
478
513
524
535
539
544
696
862
1077
1028
793
682
603
125
138
152
168
178
181
185
128
139
172
175
145
130
133
405
394
286
162
123
115
106
135
124
114
105
99
98
96
195
215
237
261
277
282
288
43
40
37
33
32
31
31
207
279
377
509
608
644
682
301
317
576
925
960
971
981
267
337
803
1147
1227
1257
1287
308
339
374
413
438
446
455
624
542
427
304
244
226
209
226
226
236
213
190
183
177
710
788
713
566
500
482
462
296
483
726
799
716
668
633

(531091)
(1441008)
(220929)
(293819)
(347763)
(368743)
(374746)
(525890)
(7231012)
(9381225)
(9161145)
(729860)
(637727)
(563643)
(76186)
(112166)
(124183)
(136202)
(145214)
(148217)
(152221)
(<1579)
(4.8489)
(8.6571)
(19498)
(51288)
(77198)
(63228)
(169740)
(193665)
(181415)
(149176)
(114132)
(102128)
(94118)
(82201)
(101150)
(93137)
(88123)
(81120)
(80117)
(79115)
(118289)
(175259)
(193285)
(212315)
(225334)
(231339)
(237345)
(2664)
(3248)
(3044)
(2740)
(2638)
(2638)
(2537)
(126308)
(227337)
(307454)
(414613)
(495733)
(526774)
(560816)
(204416)
(258382)
(468694)
(7531115)
(7811157)
(7941165)
(8061173)
(163397)
(274406)
(654968)
(9341381)
(9981479)
(10281508)
(10581538)
(187457)
(276409)
(304451)
(336497)
(356527)
(364536)
(373545)
(3211025)
(291869)
(256642)
(218405)
(191303)
(181275)
(168254)
(192262)
(192262)
(206269)
(196229)
(178203)
(171195)
(166189)
(623803)
(718862)
(660768)
(518616)
(452551)
(433533)
(417510)
(156482)
(332662)
(570901)
(630988)
(554899)
(510846)
(486799)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATEb

6.9
24
46
62
72
81
77
1.4
5.7
12
13
10
9.1
7.6
0.16
1
2.1
2.6
2.9
3
3.1
13
38
55
62
57
54
51
13
11
10
6.4
4.3
3.9
3.6

(0.9918)
(7.451)
(2082)
(3598)
(47100)
(56110)
(53110)
(0.772.2)
(4.47.2)
(9.814)
(1115)
(9.511)
(7.611)
(7.18.1)
(0.0770.27)
(0.661.4)
(1.42.8)
(1.73.6)
(1.94)
(2.33.8)
(2.44)
(0.1256)
(1.7130)
(3.9170)
(7.9170)
(20110)
(3380)
(2587)
(5.224)
(4.918)
(615)
(5.87)
(44.6)
(3.54.4)
(3.24)

51
152
251
300
321
355
330
98
345
619
615
473
405
333
2
11
19
20
20
20
20
14
34
44
45
38
35
32
183
189
124
69
43
38
34

<0.01
0.014
0.02
0.018
0.2
0.72
1.4
2.2
2.8
3
3.2

(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.028)
(<0.010.035)
(<0.010.03)
(0.0710.39)
(0.461)
(0.892)
(1.43.1)
(2.23.5)
(2.63.5)
(2.64)

3.4
8.6
12
11
2.7
8.6
14
20
24
25
26

<0.01
<0.01
0.013
0.2
1.1
2.7
3.9
4.2
4
8.3
47
140
260
280
280
300
0.48
1.8
6.4
10
12
12
13
0.49
2.1
3.6
4.6
5.1
5.2
5.4
72
73
61
48
44
41
38
20
31
37
36
33
31
30
33
48
49
44
42
41
40
18
48
78
81
69
65
60

(<0.010.012)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.028)
(<0.010.68)
(0.561.9)
(1.83.7)
(3.24.8)
(3.45.1)
(3.34.8)
(4.713)
(3659)
(120180)
(210320)
(230340)
(230330)
(240350)
(0.260.76)
(1.42.2)
(5.27.8)
(8.312)
(9.514)
(1015)
(1015)
(0.141.1)
(1.42.9)
(2.64.7)
(3.36.1)
(3.76.7)
(4.26.4)
(4.36.5)
(37120)
(39120)
(3693)
(3366)
(3454)
(3349)
(3046)
(1525)
(2538)
(3045)
(3043)
(3135)
(3033)
(2832)
(2248)
(4254)
(4456)
(3850)
(3846)
(3745)
(3644)
(9.430)
(3365)
(6197)
(64100)
(5486)
(4982)
(4776)

6.3
1.8
<1
5.1
27
52
70
74
68
23
112
321
544
569
563
591
56
187
605
932
###
###
###
13
50
75
85
88
89
89
407
349
252
169
139
126
112
77
103
109
93
78
72
67
426
537
485
382
341
324
302
173
409
623
647
555
518
480

NUMBER

RATEb

15 899
17 882
21 158
33 231
39 261
43 221
43 558
2 671
1 540
10 799
14 920
13 440
11 980
11 281
5 200
1 980
4 701
7 873
9 209
9 904
10 130
20 122
13 423
25 821
62 598
85 674
88 589
84 121
6 387
3 054
6 093
7 220
7 472
7 251
6 703
17

117
112
116
160
176
189
186
189
93
570
717
611
534
494
67
22
43
61
64
66
65
21
12
21
45
57
57
53
90
55
75
78
75
70
63
15

97
136
66
78
121
4 977
7 561
8 508
9 765
11 040
11 139
11 061
41
8
20
14
6
15
17
632
1 955
3 760
6 737
10 786
11 524
12 859
80 400
73 917
151 239
270 178
343 855
360 183
354 786

69
89
41
48
73
69
90
90
90
94
92
89
58
11
25
17
7
17
20
16
50
91
131
192
201
219
219
179
338
565
697
724
708

2 050
5 877
8 062
8 685
10 038
10 101
1 324
1 520
1 409
2 537
2 967
2 986
2 791
14 740
25 316
30 372
41 040
42 178
41 703
42 885
22 249
39 847
54 442
61 022
60 490
61 537
61 098
16 863
35 958
49 806
49 576
43 686
44 879
44 154
9 132
30 831
50 855
50 454
36 650
42 971
44 209

213
552
730
755
859
852
36
37
29
47
51
51
46
83
122
125
144
135
129
128
87
133
160
157
143
141
136
215
403
488
433
353
353
337
87
264
407
401
294
344
352

(7.3136)
(47318)
(108453)
(168470)
(210455)
(244486)
(228449)
(54153)
(264436)
(516732)
(525713)
(433515)
(338478)
(311356)
(<13.4)
(7.215)
(1326)
(1327)
(1328)
(1525)
(1526)
(<157)
(1.5115)
(3.2138)
(5.6123)
(1376)
(2252)
(1655)
(73343)
(88327)
(74187)
(6376)
(4046)
(3443)
(3038)

(<17.5)
(2.917)
(5.721)
(5.718)
(<15.3)
(5.512)
(9.421)
(1329)
(1830)
(2129)
(2132)

(1.214)
(<18)
(<1<1)
(<118)
(1346)
(3573)
(5785)
(6089)
(5682)
(1335)
(86142)
(257391)
(438661)
(458693)
(463673)
(488704)
(3088)
(145233)
(486737)
(7551127)
(8281221)
(8521245)
(8731256)
(3.829)
(3471)
(5498)
(62112)
(64116)
(71108)
(72108)
(209669)
(187561)
(148384)
(117231)
(108173)
(102152)
(91136)
(6097)
(82126)
(88132)
(78110)
(7383)
(6877)
(6271)
(274610)
(469609)
(428546)
(333434)
(309375)
(291357)
(273332)
(89282)
(282559)
(487775)
(506806)
(435689)
(397655)
(371603)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

29
23
23
31
33
35
34
27
11
53
70
77
78
82
53
16
28
36
36
37
35
16
9
12
26
39
44
40
22
14
26
48
61
61
60
11

60
85
42
49
76
35
42
38
34
34
33
31
133
27
70
50
22
56
64
8
18
24
26
32
31
32
73
56
59
61
73
75
72

63
69
64
62
68
66
12
11
8
11
12
11
10
13
22
29
47
55
57
61
39
59
68
74
75
77
77
30
51
68
76
71
73
73
29
55
56
50
41
52
56

(11222)
(1178)
(1353)
(2055)
(2351)
(2551)
(2550)
(2136)
(913)
(4661)
(6378)
(7184)
(7384)
(7788)
(3688)
(1319)
(2335)
(3044)
(3044)
(3045)
(3043)
(44184)
(2254)
(4242)
(9232)
(20112)
(2975)
(2385)
(1253)
(828)
(1842)
(4553)
(5765)
(5569)
(5467)
(718)
(5074)
(72102)
(3451)
(4160)
(6493)
(2458)
(3552)
(3146)
(2942)
(2842)
(2740)
(2638)
(90219)
(2233)
(5886)
(4262)
(1827)
(4668)
(5378)
(513)
(1522)
(2030)
(2132)
(2639)
(2638)
(2739)
(53107)
(4769)
(4972)
(5175)
(6089)
(6291)
(6088)
(5278)
(5785)
(5378)
(5176)
(5784)
(5580)
(819)
(913)
(710)
(914)
(1014)
(914)
(812)
(826)
(1442)
(2049)
(3666)
(4470)
(4771)
(5176)
(3345)
(5169)
(6078)
(6980)
(7181)
(7383)
(7282)
(2734)
(4756)
(6474)
(7084)
(6478)
(6681)
(6681)
(1856)
(4080)
(4571)
(4164)
(3353)
(4167)
(4472)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Algeria

46

63

Angola

99

234

Benin

43

42

Botswana

213

349

Burkina Faso

16

29

Burundi

82

91

Cameroon

48

123

Cape Verde

63

72

Central African
Republic

72

151

Chad

43

84

Comoros

32

17

Congo

25

251

Cte d'Ivoire

63

115

Democratic
Republic
of the Congo

58

173

Equatorial
Guinea

70

117

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
11 607
13 507
18 572
21 336
20 588
21 701
22 336
10 271
5 143
16 062
37 175
44 576
41 221
44 655
2 074
2 400
2 697
3 270
3 872
3 878
3 756
2 938
5 665
9 292
10 058
8 891
8 362
7 013
1 497
2 572
2 331
3 478
4 238
4 716
4 800
4 575
3 326
6 421
6 585
6 808
7 277
7 611
5 892
3 292
5 251
21 499
24 622
24 662
24 073
221
303
292
334
332
356
2 124
3 339

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

5 735
8 328
8 654
8 643
8 402
8 299

2 256
2 019
1 651
1 528
1 691
1 770

5 065
7 758
10 216
9 908
10 888
11 770

3 804
9 053
20 410
22 562
22 488
21 146
1 410
1 839
2 277
2 739
2 966
2 960
2 973

1 631
5 367
12 467
16 490
13 755
17 285
310
281
130
96
375
338
296

266
1 102
2 569
3 287
2 580
3 780
182
212
199
285
400
418
367

1 903
3 091
3 170
3 217
3 144
3 295

2 885
4 789
5 166
3 654
3 393
2 055

1 028
1 545
2 290
2 757
3 061
3 041

OTHER RELAPSE

267
0
230
0

451
467
548
509
490
497

0
0
0

134
540
1 729
2 237
2 398
2 444
172
68
91
150
131
162
120

720
1 231
1 220
1 679
1 429
1 210

195
196
367
625
679
736

1 121
3 159
3 262
3 610
3 974
4 590

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

80
165
142
122
194

451
547
713
651
612
691

0
0

189
187
105
109
85

134
540
2 871
3 584
3 863
7 776
221
68
280
337
236
271
205

0
0
0

147
181
502
341
396
453

1 058
46
754
726
619

147
1 239
548
1 095
1 122
1 072

0
0
0

195
502
571
599
671
729

90
68
92
77

45
88
160
189
213
217

90
167
311
395
335

45
178
327
500
608
552

0
0
0
0
0

908
1 489
1 160
862
1 207
963

1 116
1 568
2 089
2 188
1 880
1 826

0
0
0
24
8

181
205
74
148
192
224

20
42
57
46
108

181
225
116
205
238
332

0
0
0
0
0

2 896
3 960
13 001
14 232
14 635
14 464

142
625
5 021
6 282
5 780
5 437

18
415
2 461
3 191
3 190
3 157

236
251
1 016
917
1 057
1 015

574
503
512
479

236
251
1 590
1 420
1 569
1 494

0
0
0
0

111

150

12

135
197
172
186

93
82
94
98

43
39
53
54

13
15
20
9

34
31
33
27

128
132
253
117

291
373
629
421

0
0

0
0
0

1 142
1 347
1 465
5 332
49

30
0
0
0

21
16
13
18

0
0

0
0
0

30

1 794

964

393

3 210
6 803
8 743
6 643
2 591
3 186

2 153
4 232
5 132
3 638

608
1 387
1 841
1 598

286
943
1 394
1 079

2 002

518

463

6 311
6 912
8 411
9 452
140
123
120
111
132
120
123
591
3 615
9 239
9 853
8 886
9 765
10 150
7 841
11 988
15 094
19 681
23 688
22 571
22 708
21 131
42 819
61 024
97 075
104 861
111 709
114 170
260
306

2 516
3 309
3 820
3 833

2 419
2 331
2 949
3 746

1 055
924
1 206
1 217

0
0
193

321
348
436
463

194
283
240
245

515
631
676
708

0
0
0

103
87
79
77
76

10
14
14
20
15

7
15
16
27
24

0
5
0

7
4
2
3
5

1
1
3
1

7
5
3
6
6

0
2
8

2 013
4 218
3 640
3 371
3 433
3 568

849
2 016
3 249
2 868
3 398
3 545

675
2 810
2 665
2 345
2 653
2 692

78
169
299
302
281
345

650
108
171
170
171

78
819
407
473
451
516

8 254
10 276
12 496
15 294
14 300
14 131

1 508
1 616
2 315
2 733
2 321
2 381

1 577
2 756
4 235
4 592
4 952
5 179

0
0
0
0
0

649
446
635
1 069
998
1 017

447
345
360
438
502

649
893
980
1 429
1 436
1 519

0
0
0
0
0

20 914
36 513
65 040
69 720
73 078
73 653

7 953
8 089
9 959
11 490
12 968
14 039

9 112
13 785
18 494
19 654
21 313
22 340

2 891
2 637
3 582
3 997
4 350
4 138

2 483
3 741
4 316
4 466

2 891
2 637
6 065
7 738
8 666
8 604

219

45

41

541
490
579

92
109
98

58
77
109

718
707
820

188

0
0
0

0
0
24

163
241
376
304

188

203

27
31
34

203

0
0
0

0
0

23
13
33

50
44
67

0
0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

72
80
84
85
83
82

70
63
62
58
62
55
82
87
95
97
89
90
91

40
39
38
47
48
62

84
89
86
82
82
81

55
68
74
81
77
83

95
86
72
69
72
73

43

59
71
65
65

65

78
75
74
69

79

51
59
56
51

91
86
85
79
84

70
68
53
54
50
50

85
86
84
85
86
86

72
82
87
86
85
84

83

85
82
86

African Region

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

129

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV
NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

YEAR

Eritrea

117

55

Ethiopia

183

186

Gabon

99

231

Gambia

120

Ghana

43

60

Guinea

35

111

Guinea-Bissau

114

144

Kenya

50

245

Lesotho

154

538

Liberia

165

Madagascar

56

118

Malawi

132

142

Mali

34

34

Mauritania

265

71

Mauritius

11

130

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
3 699
21 453
6 652
3 549
2 970
2 904
2 870
88 634
26 034
91 101
124 262
141 157
148 936
154 694
917
1 115

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

OTHER RELAPSE

590
687
839
802
832

18 205
5 332
1 764
1 063
1 123
1 115

3 248
683
1 001
880
890
836

9 040
30 510
38 525
40 794
44 396
46 634

8 888
30 565
39 816
49 372
52 053
54 979

7 763
28 907
43 675
48 794
50 228
50 417

486

517

68

44

1 042
1 502
1 244
1 560

1 071
2 306
1 414
1 366

241
419
246
379

1 023

778

171

68

2 031
2 107
2 145
2 070
6 407
8 636
10 933
12 124
14 149
14 892
14 607
1 988
3 523
5 440
6 863
10 025
8 357
11 038
1 163
1 613
1 273
1 774
2 117
2 171
2 183
11 788
28 142
64 159
102 680
99 941
102 997
99 272
2 525
5 181
9 746
10 802
12 019
12 213
11 674

1 127
1 300
1 316
1 344

749
610
622
462

78
116
141
143

2 638
7 316
7 505
7 904
8 255
7 656

1 225
2 500
3 068
4 416
4 734
5 068

109
615
1 019
1 383
1 437
1 400

2 263
3 920
5 479
6 561
5 377
7 041

527
430
524
1 288
1 021
1 472

956
526
1 132
1 223
1 310
1 409
6 800
13 934
28 773
40 389
36 811
37 402
36 260

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

79
0
0

47
97
109
89
87

20
27
36
118
121

67
124
145
207
208

343
1 119
2 246
2 197
2 259
2 664

1 658
873
752
1 285
2 234

343
2 777
3 119
2 949
3 544
4 898

155
0
0

158
158
169
168

99
138
486
390

257
296
655
558

0
0
0
81

77
81
66
40

89
62
41
41

166
143
107
81

0
0
0

159
502
532
446
466
483

318
394
538

159
502
532
764
860
1 021

0
0
0

620
938
629
1 825
1 611
2 077

0
0
86

55
152
231
351
348
362

294
227
320
241
286

55
446
458
671
589
648

0
16
0

714
600
522
797
786
636

19
57
24
28
16
22

0
0
0
0

59
90
96
69
59
116

42
13
17
76

59
90
138
82
76
192

0
0
0
0

9 676
24 143
43 772
46 115
44 514
41 962

3 468
9 118
15 265
16 881
17 438
17 382

1 064
1 773
3 254
134
3 643
3 668

704
5 721
10 310
7 068
6 811

1 064
2 477
8 975
10 444
10 711
10 479

1 361
3 041
4 280
3 862
3 976
3 600

2 685
2 838
4 063
4 879
5 083
5 331

653
2 520
2 020
2 692
2 486
2 222

147
385
439
586
668
521

1 096
602
1 200
1 302
1 464

147
1 481
1 041
1 786
1 970
1 985

1 393
1 500
3 432
4 970
5 918
6 597
6 261
21 616

1 154
1 021
2 167
3 038
3 796
3 750

119
285
575
941
1 022
1 385

120
187
657
912
1 023
1 363

7
33
79
77
99

25
24
53
46
71

32
57
132
123
170

8 026

987

2 219

18 993
22 034
22 758
24 432
12 395
19 155
23 604
25 491
23 929
22 674
21 092
2 933
3 087
4 216
4 704
5 989
6 611
5 291
5 284
3 849
3 067
2 162
2 698
2 640
2 461
119
131
160
125
107
115
122

13 056
15 391
15 729
16 795
4 301
6 285
8 260
8 443
7 627
7 623
7 240

1 287
1 311
1 639
1 657
5 827
7 054
8 846
10 132
10 155
9 297
8 245

3 634
4 111
3 990
4 545
1 885
5 257
5 734
5 823
5 369
4 966
4 857

482
741
689
674

1 866
2 527
3 530
4 734
5 163
3 686

609
797
482
403
429
481

459
653
492
660
818
926

2 074
1 583
1 155
1 605
1 555
1 422

800
687
454
415
444
390

455
580
403
512
483
524

113
115
110
85
98
105

8
14
4
14
7
5

12
23
8
5
6
6

2 512
4 540
3 073
3 473

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

596

0
0

1 016
1 221
1 400
1 435
382
551
764
1 093
778
788
750

0
2 119
1 755
1 682
1 444

1 498
1 962
2 089
2 109
382
551
764
3 212
2 533
2 470
2 194

0
0
0

153
239
200
192
201
198

180
219
224
157

153
239
380
411
425
355

0
0

520
580
150
166
158
125

358
56
28
24
28

520
938
206
194
182
153

0
0
0

2
8
3
3
4
6

4
2
1
1
1

2
12
5
4
5
7

0
317

596
0
0
0
0

0
0

44

36

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

10
28
44
42
43

50
50
49
45
46
46

48

49
39
47
53

82

60
68
68
74

68
75
71
64
64
60

81
90
91
84
84
83

57
47
68
61
63
69

59
54
48
44
46
46

34
52
51
44
44
40

91
78
79
76
79
73

89

91
92
91
91
42
47
48
45
43
45
47

75
76
88
92
92
88

72
70
72
79
78
78

93
89
96
86
93
95

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Mozambique

117

186

Namibia

189

494

Niger

67

65

Nigeria

21

53

Rwanda

90

63

Sao Tome and


Principe

15

73

Senegal

69

89

Seychelles

58

20

Sierra Leone

16

219

South Africa

219

708

Swaziland

852

Togo

36

46

Uganda

83

128

United Republic
of Tanzania

87

136

Zambia

215

337

Zimbabwe

87

352

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
15 899
17 882
21 158
33 231
39 261
43 221
43 558
2 671
1 540
10 799
14 920
13 440
11 980
11 281
5 200
1 980
4 701
7 873
9 209
9 904
10 130
20 122
13 423
25 821
62 598
85 674
88 589
84 121
6 387
3 054
6 093
7 220
7 472
7 251
6 703
17
97
136
66
78
121
4 977
7 561
8 508
9 765
11 040
11 139
11 061
41
8
20
14
6
15
17
632
1 955
3 760
6 737
10 786
11 524
12 859
80 400
73 917
151 239
270 178
343 855
360 183
354 786
2 050
5 877
8 062
8 685
10 038
10 101
1 324
1 520
1 409
2 537
2 967
2 986
2 791
14 740
25 316
30 372
41 040
42 178
41 703
42 885
22 249
39 847
54 442
61 022
60 490
61 537
61 098
16 863
35 958
49 806
49 576
43 686
44 879
44 154
9 132
30 831
50 855
50 454
36 650
42 971
44 209

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

10 566
13 257
17 877
18 824
19 579
20 097

5 054
4 037
9 184
14 117
17 019
16 408

1 363
2 262
4 771
5 012
5 301
5 621

697
4 012
5 222
4 928
4 608
4 464

507
4 724
4 455
3 714
3 628
3 309

248
1 459
1 907
2 582
2 538
2 330

1 492
3 045
5 050
5 853
6 347
6 283

116
699
1 193
1 593
1 689
1 730

372
702
1 227
1 227
1 385
1 492

9 476
17 423
35 048
46 026
44 863
45 416

3 364
6 613
22 705
34 211
37 540
32 616

280
1 069
2 836
3 026
3 560
3 422

1 840
3 681
4 166
4 173
4 184
3 785

676
845
859
1 311
1 239
1 072

338
1 289
1 727
1 743
1 582
1 577

30
49
52
52
47

56
75
11
20
63

7
1
0
4
10

5 421
5 823
6 722
7 584
7 883
7 688

1 073
1 370
1 557
1 580
1 504
1 470

504
800
921
1 283
1 233
1 404

6
11
8
4
11
9

2
7
3
0
2
8

1
2
1
2
2
0

1 454
2 472
4 370
5 826
6 092
6 898

339
821
1 679
3 952
4 491
4 919

121
400
551
854
776
831

23 112
75 967
125 460
138 803
139 468
132 107

74 399
16 392
76 680
132 972
147 187
151 772

10 636
17 486
39 739
48 251
53 411
52 095

660
1 823
2 187
3 105
3 498
3 011

687
3 198
4 106
3 379
4 157
5 064

219
583
1 458
1 762
1 903
1 631

887
984
1 798
2 234
2 267
2 096

304
91
170
231
235
164

236
287
484
408
377
397

13 631
17 246
20 559
22 766
23 113
23 456
11 553
19 955
24 049
25 264
24 171
24 895
24 769

5 912
9 003
15 040
13 190
12 315
13 567

2 070
2 618
3 780
4 710
4 893
4 571

12 362
17 624
20 810
21 935
21 750
21 184

10 038
12 927
14 857
13 211
12 995
12 639
8 965
14 392
13 155
9 830
10 195
11 654

OTHER RELAPSE

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

899
917
1 399
1 308
1 322
1 432

546
487
474
2 308
2 616

899
1 463
1 886
1 782
3 630
4 048

88
604
849
1 142
1 206
1 178

930
974
297
1 352
1 344

88
1 534
1 823
1 439
2 558
2 522

103
0
173

255
403
433
483
452

351
184
207
215

255
754
617
690
667

117
0

0
0
0
0

303
716
2 009
2 411
2 626
2 667

1 640
2 858
4 637
5 525
6 326

303
2 356
4 867
7 048
8 151
8 993

1 392
0
0
0

200
278
371
245
246
269

96
460
152
229
362

200
374
831
397
475
631

4
11
3
2
1

16
3
1
1

4
27
6
3
2

2
0
0

0
0
0

563
515
565
593
519
499

541
355
551
593
530

563
1 056
920
1 144
1 112
1 029

0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
2
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
2
0
0
0

0
0
0

41
67
137
154
165
211

374
193
235
302
336

41
441
330
389
467
547

28 299
23 829
20 117
18 812

56 202
32 289
40 641
45 799
41 768

179
56 202
60 588
64 470
65 916
60 580

489
273
311
439
480
395

976
159
880
994
1 045

489
1 249
470
1 319
1 474
1 440

0
0
0

93
47
85
94
107
134

86
94
102
107
106

93
133
179
196
214
240

4
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

955
1 505
1 661
1 512
1 382
1 291

0
769
1 665
2 632
2 661

955
1 505
2 430
3 177
4 014
3 952

6 195
10 997
13 094
12 784
13 405
13 715

1 335
1 772
1 854
1 600
1 487
1 430

3 178
2 874
2 730
2 355

1 335
1 772
5 032
4 474
4 217
3 785

3 268
25 222
24 327
19 344
20 825
20 412

656
10 202
8 587
9 580
9 246
9 255

0
0
0

243
1 455
1 805
1 551
1 813
1 848

3 691
3 685
672
4 462

243
1 455
5 496
5 236
2 485
6 310

10 934
27 626
29 074
19 956
24 890
25 157

5 040
8 837
6 721
5 931
6 683
6 061

0
0
0
0

1 504
933
1 203
1 337

4 437
2 698
3 482
3 348

5 941
3 631
4 685
4 685

0
0
0

2 487
1 074
0

97
0
0

0
0
0
0

179
0
0
0
0

0
0

737

0
0
0

0
0

217
164

0
4 386
0
0

643
0
0

0
0
0

737

0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

68
77
66
57
53
55

58
46
54
57
56
57

93
81
81
79
79
78

74
72
61
57
54
58

73
81
83
76
77
78

35
40
83
72
43

83
81
81
83
84
84

75
61
73
100
85
53

81
75
72
60
58
58

24
82
62
51
49
47

49
36
35
48
46
37

74
92
91
91
91
93

70
66
58
63
65
63

62
58
55
52
53
54

75
34
38
41
38
38

45
34
31
33
29
32

African Region

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

131

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Algeria

91

Angola

72

71

90

67

79

25

76

45

90

53

78

Benin

Botswana

Burkina Faso

Burundi

Cameroon

Cape Verde

Central African
Republic

37

53

Chad

47

76

90

Comoros

Congo

78

68

79

74

88

89

66

Cte d'Ivoire

Democratic
Republic
of the Congo

Equatorial
Guinea

Eritrea

85

61

84

Ethiopia

132

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

5 735
8 328
8 654
8 439
8 643
8 402
3 804
9 053
20 410
21 422
22 562
22 488
1 839
2 277
2 739
2 770
2 966
2 960
1 903
3 091
3 170
3 122
3 217
3 144
1 028
1 545
2 290
2 605
2 757
3 061
1 121
3 159
3 262
3 595
3 610
3 974
2 896
3 960
13 001
13 220
14 232
14 635
111
135
158
197
172
1 794
2 153
4 232
5 132
2 002
2 516
2 513
3 309
3 820
103
87
79

SIZE OF
COHORT

8 328
8 379
8 510
8 190
8 438
6 392
20 113
21 422
22 562
21 627
1 839
2 277
2 766
2 771
2 979
2 963
2 060
3 991
3 335
3 335
3 289
3 492
1 200
1 574
2 290
2 605
2 757
3 061
1 798
3 465
3 424
3 169
3 635
3 974
2 740
3 164
13 169
13 025
14 091
14 428
14
135
197
692
1 366
3 217
4 130
3 571
5 132
529

3 820
113
85
70
56
77

77
76
2 013
4 218
3 640
3 552
3 371
3 433
8 254
10 276
12 496
14 071
15 294
14 300
20 914
36 513
65 040
66 099
69 720
73 078
219

3 263
3 634
7 221
10 631
12 496
14 071
15 294
14 300
16 247
36 123
65 066
65 975
65 962
72 367
219

541
490

436
541
490

590
687
694
839
802
9 040
30 510
38 525
38 040
40 794
44 396

765
688
795
839
804
5 087
29 662
39 430
38 078
40 794
44 807

3 114
4 121

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100
97
101
95
100

71
99
100
100
96
100
100
101
100
100
100
108
129
105
107
102
111
117
102
100
100
100
100
160
110
105
88
101
100
95
80
101
99
99
99

100

100

39

149

84
100
26

100
110
98
89

100

74
113

97
106
87
103
100
100
100
100
78
99
100
100
95
99
100

100
100

130
100
115
100
100
56
97
102
100
100
101

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

80
74
79
80
81

7
13
11
10
10

1
2
2
2
2

2
0
1
0
1

5
3
4
3
3

5
8
4
4
3

68
45
48
45
47
50
57
74
79
81
82
13
22
37
50
46
57
22
53
66
67
73
72
25
42
52
74
76
83
45
67
66
61
62
65

28
26
24
25
21
20
13
8
8
9
54
55
33
23
18
22
2
7
5
5
3
4
20
39
27
12
14
7
8
10
7
15
15
13

3
3
3
4
4
6
6
7
6
6
5
5
6
7
5
5
5
5
13
14
14
11
10
3
4
4
5
4
3
7
7
6
7
6
6

2
3
2
2
2
1
2
2
3
2
2
1
0
1
2
2
3
1
2
7
7
8
9
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
2
1
1
1
1

26
19
18
18
18
17
11
3
3
2
1
12
7
8
6
4
4
3
16
6
6
4
4
14
13
17
8
6
5
35
13
14
11
10
10

2
3
3
6
5
5
3
1
1
1
0
15
10
15
15
24
9
67
9
1
1
1
2
38
1
1
0
0
0
4
1
5
6
5
5

64
56

0
8

7
3

0
2

0
19

29
12

57

17

11

11

16
36
38
47
43
33
17

21
21
28
20
29
20
30

7
0
6
8
7
3
6

0
3
2
2
2
1
1

53
34
8
12
12
13
43

3
5
19
11
9
30
3

55
90
91
91
91
90

22
0
2
0
2
0

4
4
4
3
2
4

2
0
4
4
4
0

15
6
0
0
2
4

3
0
0
1
0
3

57
24

12
4

4
0

0
1

22
13

5
58

63
66
63
47
63
62
67
69
55
69
80
83
83
85
89

13
12
6
10
11
11
9
10
20
8
5
4
4
3
0

1
1
4
5
8
7
9
8
5
6
6
4
4
4
3

0
0
1
2
2
1
2
3
1
1
1
1
1
1
0

21
13
17
16
10
13
9
7
10
8
4
4
3
3
8

1
7
9
20
6
5
4
4
9
7
4
4
4
4
0

60
42
47

0
14
19

7
4
3

1
1
1

26
31
16

6
7
14

64
83
83
72
83
56
63
64
67
67
65

12
5
5
3
2
5
17
14
17
17
19

8
7
5
4
5
5
6
5
4
3
3

1
1
2
1
3
2
1
1
1
1
1

9
2
2
1
2
13
9
4
3
3
3

6
1
3
18
5
19
4
12
8
10
10

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT

Gabon

86

55

Gambia

76

89

54

87

78

79

Ghana

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

65

67

75

86

Kenya

Lesotho

47

70

Liberia

79

83

Madagascar

55

82

71

88

Malawi

Mali

59

78

Mauritania

63

Mauritius

88

39

85

Mozambique

Namibia

85

Niger

79

49

83

Nigeria

YEAR

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

51

112
102
100
93
88

100
97
101
98
14
100
101
100
100
100
100
100
106
100
76
104
100

103

102
114
46
99
100
100
100
100
131

129
100
100
102
138
90
100

100
100
113

117
99
100
100
100
100
100
106
100
100
69

100
100
100
86

152
100
100
101

139
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100

100
100
100
100
102

105
100
99
100
99
100
94
100
100
100
100

486

249

1 042
1 462
1 502
1 244
778

1 165
1 484
1 502
1 163
686

1 127
1 238
1 300
1 316
2 638
7 316
7 505
7 429
7 904
8 255
2 263
3 920
5 479
6 199
6 561
5 377
956
526
1 132

1 127
1 199
1 318
1 296
361
7 316
7 584
7 429
7 904
8 255
2 263
3 920
5 811
6 199
4 984
5 597
959

1 223
1 310
13 934
28 773
40 389
38 360
36 811
37 402
1 361
3 041
4 280
3 723
3 862
3 976
1 154
1 021
2 167
3 038
3 796
8 026
13 056
15 344
15 391
15 729
6 285
8 260
8 443
7 608
7 627
7 623
1 866
2 527
3 530
3 894
4 734
5 163
2 074
1 583
1 155
1 714
1 605
1 555
113
115
110
86
85
98
10 566
13 257
17 877
18 214
18 824
19 579
697
4 012
5 222
5 114
4 928
4 608
1 492
3 045
5 050
5 773
5 853
6 347
9 476
17 423
35 048
44 016
46 026
44 863

1 167
1 237
1 242
1 498
6 470
28 376
40 436
38 360
36 811
37 402
1 788
5 542
3 728
3 858
4 070
1 595
924
2 167
2 309
3 042
3 796
9 101
10 506
15 298
15 261
15 376
15 709
6 293
8 296
8 443
8 065
7 632
7 624
1 290
3 530
3 897
4 734
4 454

1 761
1 716
1 605
1 563
160
110
86
85
98
10 566
13 296
17 877
18 214
18 824
19 579
4 012
5 222
5 114
4 928
4 702
3 193
5 050
5 722
5 860
6 313
9 476
16 372
35 080
44 070
46 026
44 863

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

63

22

35
22
30
37
69

12
14
24
18
7

10
3
1
1
5

1
0
0
1
1

42
18
19
25
13

1
43
27
18
5

81
80
80
88
41
45
68
77
78
79
62
59
65
71
70
72
42

6
4
4
1
13
5
5
7
8
8
17
9
7
8
8
6
23

7
8
9
6
11
6
9
9
8
7
6
7
6
4
5
5
6

1
2
2
1
2
3
2
1
1
1
2
1
2
1
2
2
0

3
3
2
2
11
14
11
3
2
3
9
15
10
7
7
7
23

2
3
3
1
22
27
5
3
3
3
5
9
10
9
8
8
6

51
64
59
51
60
66
71
75
76
78
32

18
7
11
17
14
14
11
11
9
8
14

12
5
4
6
9
5
5
4
4
4
7

1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0

11
14
17
21
9
9
8
7
7
6
9

7
9
9
5
7
6
5
4
4
4
36

73
12
9
11

1
2
2
2
5
6
0
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
1
1
0

4
4
4
5
12
10
12
16
10
9
16
17
13
11
9
9
0
4
3
1
2
2
22

14
16
9
12
0
3
8
5
5
3
20
5
5
4
5
5
10
3
7
2
2
1
14

55
64
59
79
71
60
58
64
57
47
61
67
75
77
78
65
70
72
83
85
87
41

9
16
13
15
26
8
9
7
5
4
3
6
3
2
2
2
2
18

8
10
11
11
5
2
3
6
4
5
6
7
6
5
5
4
19
19
15
9
8
7
5

69
72
75
66

6
6
6
12

11
11
9
10

4
3
4
4

7
5
4
7

3
2
2
2

44
55
54
51

11
11
14
12

2
2
2
3

1
0
1
1

19
17
12
10

24
15
17
23

0
86
85
87
88
34
73
78
78
83
84

93

3
3
3
6
4
3
10
12
10
10
9

0
0
0
5
2
1
1
1
1

0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1

3
6
8
5
4
9
11
5
5
4
3

0
5
3
2
4
48
3
2
5
1
2

41
59
72
72
74

15
16
11
10
11

6
7
5
6
5

2
2
3
4
4

15
10
5
4
4

21
7
5
4
2

42
49
68
71
66
34
65
50
71
68
73

22
25
11
10
13
15
14
25
11
11
10

8
5
5
6
7
5
6
9
5
2
5

4
2
3
2
2
2
2
4
2
5
1

12
14
10
7
7
9
11
11
9
9
8

11
5
4
4
5
35
2
1
2
6
4

African Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

133

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

Rwanda

85

Sao Tome and


Principe

98

44

85

89

64

69

79

58

73

Senegal

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

South Africa

Swaziland

69

Togo

60

81

44

67

73

88

70

90

53

78

Uganda

United Republic
of Tanzania

Zambia

Zimbabwe

134

YEAR

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

1 840
3 681
4 166
4 053
4 173
4 184

3 776
4 175
4 081
4 173
4 165

30
49
58
52
52
5 421
5 823
6 722
7 108
7 584
7 883
6
11
8
4
11
1 454
2 472
4 370
5 347
5 826
6 092
23 112
75 967
125 460
135 604
138 803
139 468
660
1 823
2 187
2 764
3 105
3 498
887
984
1 798
1 796
2 234
2 267
13 631
17 246
20 559
21 303
22 766
23 113
19 955
24 049
25 264
24 520
24 171
24 895
10 038
12 927
14 857
13 378
13 211
12 995
8 965
14 392
13 155
10 583
9 830
10 195

97
49
58
52
50
5 421
5 823
6 722
7 109
7 584
7 883
9
11
9
6
11
1 315
2 296
4 370
5 346
5 847
6 083
28 209
86 276
134 782
143 222
143 510
139 458

2 187
2 879
3 213
3 498
856
1 796
1 796
2 229
2 267
15 301
13 874
20 559
21 303
22 766
23 113
19 955
23 923
25 324
24 520
24 171
24 895
5 957
7 014
14 857
13 378
13 173
12 995
9 702
14 392
12 860
10 583
10 370
10 195

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

103
100
101
100
100

323
100
100
100
96
100
100
100
100
100
100
150
100

150
100
90
93
100
100
100
100
122
114
107
106
103
100

100
104
103
100
97

100
100
100
100
112
80
100
100
100
100
100
99
100
100
100
100
59
54
100
100
100
100
108
100
98
100
105
100

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

52
73
77
79
77

9
10
9
8
8

6
6
5
5
5

1
2
3
4
4

4
3
2
2
3

28
6
4
3
3

52
98
90
94
98
35
43
70
72
79
81
89
82

27
0
0
0
0
9
9
6
6
5
3
0
0

9
2
2
4
0
4
3
4
4
4
4
11
0

5
0
5
2
2
6
1
2
2
2
2
0
0

7
0
3
0
0
16
21
11
10
7
5
0
9

0
0
0
0
0
31
22
8
7
4
5
0
9

44
33
55
55
70
77
77
73
68
40
54
58
64
67
67

44
67
9
15
7
8
13
13
10
18
9
13
10
9
6

0
0
18
5
6
6
4
4
6
4
6
7
8
8
7

0
0
0
7
2
1
1
1
1
4
1
2
2
2
2

11
0
0
16
13
6
5
7
11
15
13
10
8
8
7

0
0
18
2
2
2
1
2
4
19
17
10
8
7
12

22
36
50
51
42

20
22
18
19
18

6
7
10
10
9

2
6
7
7
3

5
11
8
7
17

45
18
7
7
11

66
71
76
77
26
33
32
31
28
30
69
72
79
83
84
82
47
48
76
78
83
85
32
61
59
70
67
70

5
4
3
4
18
30
41
44
42
38
5
6
4
4
5
6
23
19
8
7
5
6
21
8
9
7
7
9

12
12
11
10
7
7
6
5
5
5
9
10
9
6
5
5
7
7
8
6
5
6
10
12
12
8
9
8

4
3
3
4
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
6
1
1
1
1
0
0
2
0
0
1

11
6
3
3
13
17
16
15
11
12
6
6
4
3
2
2
14
6
2
3
3
3
10
7
7
6
7
7

2
3
3
2
36
12
5
5
14
16
11
5
4
3
4
5
8
14
5
5
4
0
26
13
12
8
9
6

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Algeria

84

Angola

66

67

80

Benin

Botswana

64

77

75

46

84

Burkina Faso

Burundi

Cameroon

69

Cape Verde

Central African
Republic

32

Chad

48

70

43

Comoros

Congo

81

Cte d'Ivoire

64

Democratic
Republic
of the Congo

72

77

83

50

Equatorial
Guinea

Eritrea

82

79

67

Ethiopia

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

451
547
713
718
651
612
134
540
2 871
3 317
3 584
3 863
68
280
337
278
236
271
147
1 239
548
719
1 095
1 122
45
178
327
463
500
608
181
225
116
225
205
238
236
251
1 590
1 465
1 420
1 569
30
34
32
31
33
188

SIZE OF
COHORT

512
713
620
553

1 613
3 317
3 584
3 044
139
282
341
278
230
270
395
219
350
1 067
1 126
26
166
272
413
427
509
265
92
219
205
238
347
1 611
1 522
1 431
1 516

34
31

291

353
291

373
629
203

1 139
629
92

515
402
631
676
7
5
3
6
6
78
819
407
349
473
451
649
893
980
1 315
1 429
1 436
2 891
2 637
6 065
6 960
7 738
8 666
1

676
7
5
5
6
6

187
477
524
418
507
980
1 315
1 429
1 436
1 202
5 448
6 412
5 399
7 193
6

50
44

27
50
44

67
124
210
145
207
343
2 777
3 119
2 934
2 949
3 544

133
145
157
193
1 556
3 116
3 014
2 949
2 942

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

94
100

95
90

56
100
100
79
204
101
101
100
97
100

32
40
49
97
100
58
93
83
89
85
84
146
41

97
100
100

138
101
104
101
97

100

100

100

305
100
45

100
100
100
167

100

23
117

111
93

57
100
100
100
100
42

90
92
70
83
600

100
100

63
100
76
56
56
100
103
100
83

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

61
48

16
24

5
2

4
1

5
6

10
19

72
72

11
12

4
4

2
2

6
5

6
5

23
43
39
45
48
61
60
70
65
70

24
22
18
21
19
21
21
16
12
11

5
5
4
5
9
5
10
6
13
11

17
4
4
4
4
1
3
4
7
6

26
21
18
21
19
11
6
3
3
1

4
5
18
3
1
0
1
2
0
1

21
33
32
15
22
65
57
71
71
72
70
25
50

54
28
20
30
43
12
4
4
4
5
5
21
13

8
11
10
11
13
8
13
6
9
10
9
6
15

1
5
8
3
4
12
5
10
9
9
8
2
3

11
12
10
11
8
0
15
6
6
4
5
28
17

6
11
21
30
10
4
7
4
1
1
3
18
1

69
67
81

9
9
3

8
7
6

4
1
3

10
10
4

0
5
2

50
49
49
51
51

10
7
15
16
18

9
6
9
9
9

5
3
2
2
2

26
16
15
15
13

2
19
10
8
7

41

15

24

21

32

16

29

13

33
53

16
30

1
9

4
0

39
8

8
1

41
19
29

41
12
18

3
5
5

3
2
2

6
8
40

6
53
4

49
43
100
100
67
100

21
0
0
0
0
0

4
29
0
0
0
0

3
0
0
0
33
0

15
29
0
0
0
0

8
0
0
0
0
0

49
12

13
2

3
0

3
0

28
3

4
83

49
59

22
22

3
2

4
1

21
14

0
2

45
43
46
55
50
56

10
14
21
12
14
16

8
8
8
7
13
8

9
7
4
12
11
2

21
13
16
9
9
12

7
15
4
4
3
6

71
61
70
54
83

4
14
5
23
0

10
8
9
8
0

4
3
3
2
17

6
6
5
4
0

5
8
8
8
0

19
26
36

0
10
14

15
14
14

0
4
2

63
38
16

4
8
18

66
66
70
71
60
41
47
46
47

12
2
12
8
11
15
16
29
21

9
7
7
3
10
9
6
6
5

8
7
6
5
4
2
2
2
2

2
1
2
8
8
5
3
4
3

3
17
3
5
7
28
26
13
23

African Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

135

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Gabon

79

Gambia

69

72

Ghana

74

76

67

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

64

72

78

Kenya

Lesotho

62

Liberia

85

Madagascar

73

69

85

Malawi

Mali

75

62

Mauritania

Mauritius

60

Mozambique

Namibia

73

Niger

76

Nigeria

136

81

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

44
257
342
296
655
6
166
140
143
107
159
502
532
681
764
860
55
446
458
652
671
589
59
90
138
82
76
1 064
2 477
8 975
10 462
10 444
10 711
147
1 481
1 041
1 569
1 786
1 970
32
57
132
123
596
1 498
1 803
1 962
2 089
551
764
3 212
2 792
2 533
2 470
153
239
380
423
411
425
520
938
206
214
194
182
2
12
5
6
4
5
899
1 463
1 886
1 746
1 782
3 630
88
1 534
1 823
2 491
1 439
2 558
255
754
794
617
690
303
2 356
4 867
6 093
7 048
8 151

150
167
158
611
45

88
118
100
47
540
681
764
717
112
299
458
652
414

146
40
92
89
879
1 964
3 794
3 285
10 444
4 859

597
1 397
1 746
1 931
41
57
120
112
123

1 825
1 803
1 676
2 073
492
797
1 093
932
779
788

379
423
407
390

168
216
182
2
5
6
4
5
1 594
1 855
1 746
1 782

604
2 009
1 486
1 439
1 546

790
616
667
1 848
3 662
6 093
5 488
8 151

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

58
49
53
93
750

63
83
93
30

102
100
100
83
204
67
100
100
62

106

112
117
83
79
42
31
100
45

57
89
98
98

128
100

85
100

122
100
85
99
89
104
34
33
31
32

100
100
99
92

79
111
100

17
100
100
100
100

109
98
100
100

39
110
60
100
60

99
100
97

78
75
100
78
100

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

18
19
10
12
69

12
23
21
67
0

5
1
18
2
11

3
0
2
1
2

60
26
11
17
11

3
31
39
1
7

72
68
67
68

3
6
5
6

14
15
17
6

0
3
2
9

7
3
7
9

5
6
2
2

40
41
40
50
44
63
45
33
60

8
17
27
26
23
8
16
8
11

6
9
8
10
3
5
10
4
7

3
2
2
2
9
3
7
1
4

11
1
2
3
13
8
13
6
10

32
30
21
10
8
13
11
49
8

44
70
53
30
61
65
68
73
25
70

34
18
13
34
11
11
9
8
47
8

8
5
9
2
9
2
10
7
7
8

0
0
0
0
1
8
1
1
0
4

8
0
13
29
10
10
7
7
7
7

7
8
12
4
8
4
5
4
14
4

20
23
20

71
34
39
42

11
19
18
17

2
2
2
2

2
5
3
4

14
19
14
15

39
75
60
72
70

22
9
21
15
15

12
2
6
8
8

7
8
2
4

20
9
4
3
2

0
5
2
0
0

65
67
74
62
65
61
74
82
80
83

7
9
3
11
4
5
1
2
4
2

7
8
6
7
22
23
19
10
10
9

2
1
1
2
2
1
1
2
1
2

12
10
10
8
1
6
3
2
1
2

6
6
7
10
6
3
3
2
4
1

67
69
69
67

6
7
5
8

10
11
12
9

5
6
7
6

10
5
5
7

3
2
2
3

46
44
48

8
13
13

5
3
3

5
1
1

22
22
20

13
15
14

0
60
50
50
60

0
20
0
0
0

50

50

17
25
20

0
0
0

0
20
33
25
20

0
0
0
0
0

69
69
68
63

3
1
2
2

11
15
12
10

4
2
3
6

11
10
8
5

2
3
7
14

41
24
53
58
58

14
29
12
15
15

8
11
10
9
9

6
3
11
10
9

13
13
10
5
6

17
22
4
2
3

54
67
64

20
12
12

7
8
9

7
5
4

8
6
5

3
3
6

58
48
54
61
48

13
18
13
15
33

7
2
6
3
6

7
11
3
7
2

11
20
7
8
7

4
1
17
6
4

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Rwanda

72

Sao Tome and


Principe

67

56

71

Senegal

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

87

69

South Africa

60

Swaziland

55

Togo

33

71

Uganda

70

76

83

United Republic
of Tanzania

Zambia

86

Zimbabwe

80

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

200
374
831
478
397
475
4
27
5
6
3
563
1 056
920
843
1 144
1 112
0
0
2
0
0
41
441
330
373
389
467
179
56 202
60 588
66 646
64 470
65 916
489
1 249
470
1 083
1 319
1 474
93
133
179
130
196
214
955
1 505
2 430
2 136
3 177
4 014
1 335
1 772
5 032
4 525
4 474
4 217
243
1 455
5 496
5 833
5 236
2 485
737
5 941
2 486
3 631
4 685

SIZE OF
COHORT

296
506
448
397
448

0
5
3
3
634
931
920
843
972
889

0
0
0
69
328
168
153
466
24 847
64 923
60 084
38 754
34 122

1 113
663
1 418
1 474
93
128
133
194
237
1 209
1 433
2 491
2 856
1 455
3 356
5 067
4 525
4 474
4 217
894
5 496
5 833
2 958
5 444
1 063
4 667
2 486
1 109
1 203

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

79
61
94
100
94

0
100
50
100
113
88
100
100
85
80

168

99
45
39
100

44
107
90
60
52

237
61
108
100
100

72
102
99
111

80

67
78
71
109
189
101
100
100
100

61
100
100
56
219

79
100
31
26

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

49
56
62
64
62

5
9
8
9
10

14
15
7
7
11

1
3
14
7
7

5
4
3
5
4

25
13
6
8
6

60
67
33
45
40
58
62
70
67

0
0
33
11
8
5
5
5
4

0
0
0
5
4
8
8
7
7

20
33
33
10
3
5
4
4
5

20
0
0
25
23
13
13
10
10

0
0
0
4
23
11
8
5
8

72

14

68
80
78
56

7
10
7
13

6
8
5
10

3
0
1
3

15
2
6
15

1
0
3
4

43
29
54
53
53

8
29
10
11
8

8
11
5
11
10

3
2
6
3
3

19
16
13
13
12

19
13
13
9
15

7
20
14
14
16

21
17
34
41
17

11
12
15
17
5

3
11
11
9
4

5
12
9
10
19

54
27
17
8
38

73
59
73
68

2
4
2
3

14
23
14
18

4
2
4
3

7
11
7
4

0
2
0
5

34

30

13

13

10

32
31
31
66
49
37
39
34
34

49
48
39
10
24
39
43
47
49

8
8
7
11
14
13
10
10
8

1
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
1

6
12
15
8
6
4
3
3
3

4
0
7
4
6
6
5
4
5

52
24
24
0
33

15
60
58
80
53

11
9
9
9
9

4
1
0
0
1

5
3
3
4
4

12
4
6
6
0

51
13
35
63
72

14
46
15
10
8

17
16
19
12
11

1
0
1
1
0

8
13
14
7
5

9
11
16
7
4

African Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

137

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

YEAR

Algeria

Angola

Benin

15

98

Botswana

23

80

33

83

Burkina Faso

Burundi

71

Cameroon

78

Cape Verde

98

Central African
Republic

39

39

Chad

Comoros

100

Congo

94

20

73

24

55

Cte d'Ivoire

Democratic
Republic
of the Congo
Equatorial
Guinea

Eritrea

Ethiopia

43

Gabon

Gambia

93

69

51

Ghana

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

11

46

14

91

84

53

Kenya

Lesotho

Liberia

138

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS

5
5
15
96
96
98
23
63
75
80
33
95
90
83

8
50
71

71
72
78
98

80

42
39

39
100
80
91

2
24
94
20
72
75
73
2
20
27
24

100
46
55

3
23
37
43
7
21
32

73
94
93
7
51
65
69

10
63
51
11
25
30
46
14
83
88
91
1
68
78
84
3
80
100
53

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)

3 801
112
110
117

21 501
20 730
21 823
22 530
38 317
45 923
42 686
49 987
3 457
3 977
3 987
3 841
10 104
9 645
9 088
7 632
3 645
4 549
5 111
5 135
6 627
6 865
7 323
7 719
22 073
25 125
25 174
24 552
305
349
352
365
3 338
6 935
8 996
6 760
6 505
7 195
8 651
9 697
112
137
129

180
2 357
9 714
4 079
17 201
17 253
16 992
1 885
21 856
31 312
28 997

9 961
9 057
9 935
10 321
20 026
24 048
23 009
23 210
99 558
108 602
116 025
118 636

2 023
2 434
503
3 802
3 845
3 774
2 291
6 120
6 795
6 098
1 213
4 308
4 602
4 282
526
3 625
5 512
17 885
18 218
19 117
298
282

3 749
2 638

741
331
470

3 211
33 021
56 040
66 955
185
966
1 130

1 578
2 045
1 962
844
7 373
9 870
10 442
1 020
5 444
5 785
200
543
664
1 046
15 658
91 463
96 676
96 930
156
9 008
10 563
11 005
114
4 002
5 964
3 533

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

741
720
853
3 612
3 006
3 022
2 991
125 135
141 909
150 221
156 928
2 611
4 678
3 559
4 180
2 120
2 169
2 186
2 111
12 124
14 467
15 286
15 145
7 090
10 345
8 614
11 324
1 816
2 130
2 188
2 259
108 401
110 251
110 065
106 083
11 404
13 219
13 515
13 138
3 456
5 023
5 964
6 668

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE

306
672
57
653
633
585
1 829
4 149
4 415
3 990
559
948
903
760
243
1 305
1 260
7 211
7 383
7 628
14
57

1 230
862

663
2
0
0

36
99
757
1 551
5 073
5 207
4 112
386
3 932
6 126
5 273
41
121
225

1 321
7 891
11 098
9 809
185
613
667

294
326
224
340
1 630
2 218
2 451
197
1 288
1 539
110
250
268
396
8 954
41 174
42 294
40 069
127
6 830
8 084
8 459
14
64
72
283

15
28
11
17
16
16
80
68
65
65
46
22
20
18

46
36
23

40
41
40
5

20

33
33

17
2
0
0

20
4
8
38
29
30
24
20
18
20
18

6
37
48

41
24
20
15
100
63
59

19
16
11
40
22
22
23

19
24
27
55
46
40
38
57
45
44
41
81
76
77
77
12
2
1
8

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

14
18

97
98

32
31
79
68
98
97
96

25
47
95

59
86

66

100

100
2
3
38
60
71
80
74
42
45
24

14
85

88
67
68
69
100
49
52

93
100
87
72
86

97
40
83
100
83

44
92
92
100
79
82
94
96

50
42

9
12

40
44

32
36
45
32
52
53
41

14
32
40

36
50

100

35
62

100

100
2
3
14
22
31
26
1
18
21
9

55
20

29
44
41
39

49
52

18
11
46
37
24
24
20

24
7
45
30

17
30
34
48

27
28
27

39
49

18 762
12 802
11 732
738
0

0
617
0
0
674

0
0

0
0
0

1 983
1 493
2 403
6 636
0
0

0
0

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

Madagascar

17

44

88

43

24

91

95

88

16

76

46

10

79

65

98

100

92

69

100

74

Malawi

Mali

Mauritania

Mauritius

Mozambique

Namibia

Niger

Nigeria

Rwanda

Sao Tome and


Principe

Senegal

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

South Africa

22

54

86

Swaziland

Togo

78

25

81

90

83

80

Uganda

United Republic
of Tanzania

Zambia

Zimbabwe

YEAR

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS
9
28
9
17
44
84
86
88

49
55
43
0
2
11
24
91
94
95
95

81
84
88
16
67
74
76

24
24
46
10
62
75
79
65
96
97
98
100
97
100
92

51
59
69

100
100
100

72
73
74
22
39
49
54

101
97
86

17
56
78
25
63
71
81
3
77
88
90
2
65
77
83

56
62
80

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

1 759
6 471
2 176
4 149
12 243
21 557
21 041
19 855
3 041
3 760
2 353
10
52
281
608
115
101
110
117
32 182
38 087
40 554
2 547
9 188
9 849
9 535
2 243
2 424
4 711
6 897
56 053
70 693
71 844
5 003
7 510
7 448
6 914
152
69
79
112
5 963
6 906
8 018
6
15
17
7 949
8 625
9 718
67 988
150 542
197 448
213 006
9 635
10 730
9 536
512
1 734
2 256
10 555
27 695
31 695
36 724
1 613
48 846
56 388
56 849
1 082
30 654
34 992
40 543
22 062
28 952
38 012

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)
19 475
22 775
23 447
25 106
27 610
25 684
24 356
22 536
4 884
6 208
6 835
5 448
2 218
2 726
2 664
2 489
127
108
116
123
33 718
39 735
45 529
46 174
15 894
13 737
13 332
12 625
8 224
9 393
10 228
10 345
66 848
90 311
94 114
90 447
7 680
7 841
7 644
7 065
152
71
79
122
10 120
11 591
11 732
11 591
14
6
15
17
6 930
11 021
11 826
13 195
302 467
388 882
405 982
396 554
8 864
9 565
11 032
11 146
2 635
3 069
3 093
2 897
41 809
43 843
44 335
45 546
64 200
63 364
64 267
63 453
53 267
47 371
45 551
48 616
54 891
39 348
46 453
47 557

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE
16
9
7
14
8 447
13 687
13 558
12 476
452
585
416
0
52
27
35
2
10
7
8
19 330
25 056
24 574
1 465
5 718
5 676
5 227
152
320
403
402
1 241
15 301
18 087
17 736
2 276
2 560
2 529
2 199
5
6
10
13
601
455
776
2
0
3
1
920
987
976
35 299
89 950
114 523
128 457
8 081
8 889
7 788
162
342
444
7 523
16 432
17 131
19 836
841
19 940
21 541
21 662
614
20 839
23 584
26 418
16 619
22 745
28 662

1
0
0
0
69
63
64
63

15
16
18
0
100
10
6
2
10
6
7

60
66
61
58
62
58
55

14
17
9
18
27
26
25
45
34
34
32
3
9
13
12

10
7
10

0
20
6

12
11
10
52
60
58
60

84
83
82

32
20
20
71
59
54
54
52
41
38
38
57
68
67
65

75
79
75

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

92
96
94
94

9
100
75

100

100
50
100
100

92
89
97

92
78
92
43
45
24

26
48
59
15
87
92
97

100
100
92

71
85
85
100

100
100

7
6
100
72
71
74

94
94
93

34
74

25
78
86
90
61
82
89
92

46
64
77

75
92
18

71
100
49
38
45
46

4
10
52

100

50
50
71
75

30
22
25

35
35
42
34

45
39
33
13
60
63

50
30
54

34
27
37
100

100
100

13
19
33
25
42
54

24
26
35

30
36

10
22
22
24
22
30
31
35
68
41
42
47

28
38
30

0
0
0

0
0
0

724
2 429
8 904

17 737
13 989

2 099
1 853
1 750
0
0

2
0

African Region

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

0
0

0
0
0

1 466
7 359
23 583
124 049
0
2 107
0
0
0

153

850

226

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

139

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

YEAR
Algeria

Angola

Benin

Botswana

Burkina Faso

Burundi

Cameroon

Cape Verde

Central African
Republic

Chad

Comoros

Congo

Cte d'Ivoire

Democratic
Republic
of the Congo
Equatorial
Guinea

Eritrea

Ethiopia

Gabon

Gambia

Ghana

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

Kenya

Lesotho

Liberia

140

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa
74

56

3
28
4
14
15
126
101
106
3
16
19
31
17
0
24

26
35
0
0
0
12
7
9

3
2
0

47
24
43
50
128
91
87
5
0

130
233
140

0
0
0
0
1
2
4
20
72
69
31

44
102
150
112

527

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED
20 788
20 079
21 211
21 839
35 446
42 339
38 823
42 211
3 120
3 741
3 716
3 636
9 556
8 550
7 966
6 560
3 318
4 049
4 503
4 583
6 511
6 660
7 085
7 387
20 483
23 705
23 605
23 058
271
318
319
338
3 047
6 562
8 367
6 339
5 990
6 564
7 975
8 989
109
129
115
9 554
8 584
9 484
9 805
19 046
22 619
21 573
21 691
93 493
100 864
107 359
110 032
691
676
786
3 452
2 861
2 815
2 783
122 016
138 960
146 677
152 030
2 354
4 382
2 904
3 305
1 954
2 026
2 079
2 030
11 592
13 703
14 426
14 124
6 632
9 674
8 009
10 676
1 678
2 048
2 112
2 067
99 426
99 807
99 354
95 604
10 363
11 433
11 545
11 153
3 399
4 891
5 841
6 498

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB
809

31
0
103
530
268
488
1
3
1
0
0
22

0
0
0
0

233
225
9

0
0
0

0
0
0
0
40

1
0

16
42

0
0
50
0

215
0
6
5

0
0
0

1
0

6
3
7

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0

0
0

4
3
0

0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

3
0
0
0

0
0
0

14

3
0
15
51
30
45
1
0
1
0
0
22

0
0
0
0

1
1
9

0
0
0

0
0
0
3

1
0

12
19

0
0
0
0

5
0
6
5

0
0
0

NOTIFIED
713
651
612
691
2 871
3 584
3 863
7 776
337
236
271
205
548
1 095
1 122
1 072
327
500
608
552
116
205
238
332
1 590
1 420
1 569
1 494
34
31
33
27
291
373
629
421
515
631
676
708
3
6
6
407
473
451
516
980
1 429
1 436
1 519
6 065
7 738
8 666
8 604
50
44
67
124
145
207
208
3 119
2 949
3 544
4 898
257
296
655
558
166
143
107
81
532
764
860
1 021
458
671
589
648
138
82
76
192
8 975
10 444
10 711
10 479
1 041
1 786
1 970
1 985
57
132
123
170

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

164

107
141
94
6
299
251
286
126
0
52
117
0
0
2

216
35
1
0

21
21
0

0
0
0

0
53
309
72
190
111
100
0
0

298
510

143
0
2
100
21
34
0
63
26

1 829
5 043
1 971
706

23

32
60
35
3

27
22
27
39
0
9
21

0
0
1

14
2

3
0

6
3
0

0
0

0
4
22
5

2
1
1

8
10

100
0

0
13

2
7
0
11
4

20
48
18
7

60

25
4
14
0
75
54
51
3
0
19
30
0
0
2

26
35
0
0

11
6
0

0
0
0

24
43
50
125
91
87
0
0

180
121

0
0
1
2
4
15
0
63
26

44
102
130
103

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

Madagascar

Malawi

Mali

Mauritania

Mauritius

Mozambique

Namibia

Niger

Nigeria

Rwanda

Sao Tome and


Principe

Senegal

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

South Africa

Swaziland

Togo

Uganda

United Republic
of Tanzania

Zambia

Zimbabwe

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

6
3
3
9
16
6
40
2
7
22
12
11
6
35
0
1
1
2
115
181
140
165
221
301
214
52
24
39
23
28
21
35
79
78
90

0
7
11
38

0
0

2 000
8 026
9 070
7 386
170
190
326
2
4
2
46
26
57
93
10
24
24
34
56
29

17

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED
17 977
20 813
21 358
22 997
24 398
23 151
21 886
20 342
4 504
5 797
6 410
5 093
2 012
2 532
2 482
2 336
122
104
111
116
31 832
37 953
41 899
42 126
14 071
12 298
10 774
10 103
7 470
8 776
9 421
9 678
60 589
83 263
85 963
81 454
6 849
7 227
7 005
6 434
125
63
76
120
9 200
10 447
10 620
10 562
12
6
15
17
6 600
10 632
11 359
12 648
241 879
320 026
340 066
335 974
7 751
8 246
9 558
9 706
2 452
2 873
2 879
2 657
39 379
40 666
40 321
41 594
59 168
58 890
60 050
59 668
47 771
42 135
43 066
42 306
48 950
35 717
41 768
42 872

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

44
60
0
0
871
0
0
14
0
161

114
85
98
105
113
75
73
80

0
0
168
17
27
57
41
77
171

168
57
41

298
2 200
148
0
0

476
369
358
276
450
348
201
0
63

0
0

0
0
4
0
0
0
0
8

93
82
88
91
0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0
0
1
1
1
3

2
1
0

4
23
2

0
0

1
1
1
0
1
1
0

0
0

0
0
0
0
1
0
0
11
0
4
6

0
0
1
1
18
30
45
18
13
25
19

0
0
9
12
8
35
31
8
8

3
3
2

197

17
190
51
0
0

5
6
15
1
6
9
9
0
13

NOTIFIED
1 498
1 962
2 089
2 109
3 212
2 533
2 470
2 194
380
411
425
355
206
194
182
153
5
4
5
7
1 886
1 782
3 630
4 048
1 823
1 439
2 558
2 522
754
617
690
667
4 867
7 048
8 151
8 993
831
397
475
631
27
6
3
2
920
1 144
1 112
1 029
2
0
0
0
330
389
467
547
60 588
64 470
65 916
60 580
470
1 319
1 474
1 440
179
196
214
240
2 430
3 177
4 014
3 952
5 032
4 474
4 217
3 785
5 496
5 236
2 485
6 310
5 941
3 631
4 685
4 685

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

144
22
24
917
867
34
449
0
16
14
12
30
6

3
4
5
7
305
277
213
251

33
47
19
25
19
0
76
138
431

31
31
66

980
505
39
4

407
228
356
405
191
177
246
566
30

7
1
1
29
34
1
20
0
4
3
3
15
3

60
100
100
100
16
16
6
6

5
7

0
0
0
0
19
29
68

3
3
6

74

35

20
2

13
6
9
8
4
4
6

11
1

6
3
3
9
16
39
0
7
11
12
7

0
1
0
1
97
109
95
130
208
267
193

24
39
14
11
11
0
48
70
82

African Region

YEAR

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa

4
8
35

1 803

105
246
2
4

21
41
37
9
17
15
22
56
16

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

141

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[
MALE
YEAR

Algeria

Angola

Benin

Botswana

Burkina Faso

Burundi

Cameroon

Cape Verde

Central African
Republic

Chad

Comoros

Congo

Cte d'Ivoire

Democratic
Republic
of the Congo
Equatorial
Guinea

Eritrea

Ethiopia

Gabon

Gambia

Ghana

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

Kenya

Lesotho

Liberia

Madagascar

142

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

FEMALE

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

59
53
52
386
186
520
448
14
19
21
18

927
1 309
1 203
724
999
2 549
2 900
186
277
306
314

1 516
1 841
1 669
562
1 003
2 797
3 584
352
428
595
631

610
919
825
346
912
1 918
2 415
306
327
396
443

491
473
513
224
482
1 255
1 424
176
213
270
267

234
314
392
155
312
665
691
101
103
135
164

299
426
397
14
194
461
355
92
74
87
85

25
27
45
4
12
18
20
5

185
260
256
67
91
181
231
128

605
563
590
133
274
430
620
238

488
506
477
124
252
370
493
224

267
272
239
62
133
273
328
73

135
135
137
48
68
144
224
32

96
97
107
29
65
113
173
19

34
56
20
41
134
106

352
481
208
518
1 472
1 497

591
773
569
842
2 482
2 750

525
651
323
584
1 766
1 996

372
570
287
284
1 035
1 314

111
270
204
130
463
559

55
157
164
75
289
329

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

36
102
79
371
247
704
558
26
36
25
29

1 005
1 044
1 086
707
1 142
2 926
2 763
148
239
249
265

1 293
820
826
443
1 091
2 682
2 594
197
275
331
382

746
389
417
264
844
1 797
1 688
118
149
145
200

314
270
251
248
417
1 138
958
69
76
89
98

208
229
222
130
200
581
482
32
45
51
42

312
465
367
18
120
417
286
22
25
39
35

37
45
68
7
7
15
33
19

335
321
338
76
59
125
158
109

469
491
509
53
128
248
259
124

262
253
301
39
101
174
198
89

98
97
119
26
45
109
124
33

57
55
56
11
38
54
97
12

36
48
53
10
14
40
83
4

46
78
9
63
226
172

298
390
185
368
1 467
1 474

399
421
313
530
1 788
2 031

288
332
223
293
1 028
1 121

122
225
153
139
503
642

36
99
106
60
205
290

33
87
93
33
143
183

22

23

26

16

38

162

356

206

120

40

18

39

233

350

145

57

21

29
78

40
379

1 136
633

160
468

26
251

35
135

15
63

30
88

32
367

420
576

145
319

30
155

40
73

15
44

25
76
0
0
0

194
382
18
18
12

535
850
13
7
9

409
666
9
14
6

229
379
7
9
4

123
173
8
3
2

82
99
4
4
4

28
59
1
1
2

148
274
13
9
10

298
413
9
6
7

211
263
8
12
4

148
158
6
1
8

59
79
5
2
3

27
44
2
1
8

16

265

409

221

73

44

15

17

296

353

167

61

38

11

41
41

435
989

672
2 092

424
1 344

203
759

77
283

55
130

49
99

409
810

510
813

296
497

152
273

70
105

56
19

128
159
373
485
1 321
1 707
8

1 346
1 751
1 572
4 048
6 675
6 859
15

2 449
2 858
2 382
5 833
9 808
10 412
45

1 606
1 882
1 890
4 151
7 577
9 134
37

888
1 010
1 184
2 549
5 022
6 464
15

422
505
634
1 295
2 637
3 641
11

385
375
289
602
1 499
1 907
7

193
246
331
718
1 695
1 987
2

1 280
1 431
1 223
4 422
7 570
7 199
18

1 756
1 819
1 532
5 146
8 501
9 120
28

989
1 051
1 232
3 309
5 832
6 721
20

528
531
863
1 724
3 898
4 579
4

232
304
427
855
2 054
2 612
7

201
209
137
351
951
1 311
1

10

71

80

59

35

16

10

9
9
10
247
915
1 109
1 582
3

70
68
93
1 221
5 095
6 726
7 400
45

75
73
109
1 017
5 187
6 181
7 785
74

57
50
81
541
3 082
3 454
4 451
80

32
45
51
276
1 495
1 985
2 746
54

25
51
37
142
610
1 027
1 473
30

20
39
60
51
397
475
822
15

13
15
3

123
145
68

199
223
181

140
208
88

70
130
72

38
89
29

25
91
24

13
9
42
73
49
63
18
39
51
61

133
194
223
550
592
570
244
551
749
679

292
314
397
1 266
1 201
1 146
538
860
1 165
877

206
184
398
1 115
1 311
1 301
357
570
778
982

62
141
302
811
944
1 030
189
282
463
876

53
68
190
495
462
540
98
203
195
565

44
39
112
426
414
447
61
103
130
289

2
14
18
154
264
359
357
9
8
32
16

52
116
164
2 072
3 739
4 790
4 698
108
165
395
222

92
167
219
3 073
6 653
8 832
7 945
214
458
695
607

80
153
183
1 675
3 548
5 069
5 077
256
517
397
497

64
130
141
920
1 630
2 521
2 509
189
395
148
364

39
72
80
485
630
1 031
994
96
198
82
244

19
42
43
296
414
590
658
88
76
37
133

12
26
90
79

133
240
338
791

196
352
621
1 289

127
333
510
1 173

52
155
295
630

17
74
114
423

26
65
21
242

98
204

1 159
1 721

1 867
1 621

1 732
2 525

1 349
1 782

582
960

333
485

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

13

80

57

45

26

10
8
3
283
1 037
1 326
1 608
9

100
67
88
908
4 699
5 885
5 708
47

87
127
111
781
4 424
5 663
6 480
54

71
72
79
382
2 105
2 730
3 439
28

21
39
43
152
976
1 296
1 950
25

12
21
31
64
366
513
855
19

8
18
36
15
122
155
335
3

19
13
4

128
110
39

123
164
61

88
122
44

29
100
25

29
86
12

18
64
8

2
6
40
74
68
64
28
66
65
51

84
104
199
456
450
446
202
314
594
549

87
121
272
791
693
667
255
446
583
739

64
71
205
566
527
560
153
245
354
751

38
35
122
338
366
369
64
114
203
405

22
40
88
179
207
204
37
82
94
145

27
18
48
176
221
249
19
45
55
72

4
13
30
187
416
577
549
14
11
19
27

30
78
100
1 802
3 916
5 144
4 044
106
222
226
283

46
110
161
1 759
4 363
6 521
5 112
125
336
721
597

47
92
133
741
1 874
2 781
2 372
71
195
616
329

24
82
80
411
831
1 266
1 056
49
83
494
169

15
44
38
242
347
593
544
17
36
297
64

12
19
19
117
148
315
345
19
29
121
48

21
37
254
100

140
232
339
799

149
297
488
1 108

88
171
259
744

28
108
171
340

16
52
151
230

16
25
99
78

150
323

1 012
1 621

1 451
1 943

1 047
1 376

614
946

248
397

129
192

UNKNOWN

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO

1.1
1.6
1.6
1.1
1.0
1.0
1.3
2.0
1.7
1.9
1.8

1.4
1.4
1.3
2.1
2.3
2.0
2.2
1.8

1.7
1.8
1.6
1.7
1.4
1.4

2.0

1.1

2.0
1.2

1.7
2.0
1.3
1.7
0.9

1.1

1.2
2.2

1.4
1.5
1.4
1.1
1.1
1.2
1.7

1.2

0.9
1.0
1.1
1.4
1.2
1.2
1.3
1.6

1.4
1.4
2.4

2.5
2.4
1.7
1.8
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.0
1.8
1.6

2.0
1.6
1.5
1.6
1.4
1.3
1.6
2.4
2.0
0.7
1.4

1.2
1.4
1.1
1.4

1.5
1.4

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[

Malawi

Mali

Mauritania

Mauritius

Mozambique

Namibia

Niger

Nigeria

Rwanda

Sao Tome and


Principe

Senegal

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

South Africa

Swaziland

Togo

Uganda

United Republic
of Tanzania

Zambia

Zimbabwe

FEMALE

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

25
50
58
50
27
23
26
94

493
653
622
565
72
206
350
381

1 195
1 476
1 653
1 509
357
430
628
707

833
1 113
1 031
985
294
396
539
526

519
585
549
485
181
297
365
354

215
245
279
275
138
235
263
227

89
114
157
187
102
144
193
207

17
2
2
0
187

192
17
6
10
9
1 136

295
13
9
15
9
1 475

206
22
18
21
13
1 338

137
27
19
20
23
1 022

99
13
14
10
15
664

76
8
8
6
7
320

0
18
98
36

68
269
355
359

235
874
1 027
852

113
665
874
680

55
300
365
287

21
147
146
146

29
35
44
450
157
325
521

270
557
669
845
2 173
3 824
4 457

174
1 204
1 587
921
3 164
6 758
9 186

441
819
988
937
1 836
4 544
6 218

252
497
615
557
1 091
2 863
3 804

155
45
48

466
494
430

974
713
741

824
592
526

1
2
0
94
60
71
81
0

5
5
10
717
772
1 050
1 351
2

0
0
10
18
45
64

2
0
184
287
490
718

11
7
14
1 219
1 297
1 561
1 793
0
2
1
0
305
486
792
1 176

116
2 035
1 496
4
11
9
30
7
4
11
21
370
283
257
268
183
200
190
232
91
349
135

723
10 422
9 925
59
130
162
207
95
101
177
150
1 193
1 511
1 598
2 055
2 108
2 357
2 062
1 975
659
2 175
1 240

210
150

837
710

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

65
66
84
103
31
14
33
31

802
1 038
913
610
132
174
208
265

1 028
1 481
1 598
1 196
184
232
348
337

573
831
859
661
128
152
245
247

294
401
386
314
107
106
152
144

108
148
180
198
61
75
101
96

45
64
74
102
52
43
72
70

14
2
1
0
226

90
4
5
4
7
994

104
12
8
5
9
1 314

82
10
8
5
4
1 016

52
8
6
11
4
551

29
4
7
2
3
234

29
4
4
1
2
89

6
81
120
126

5
16
105
67

49
352
399
429

78
654
809
685

50
348
525
382

16
161
213
206

1
76
95
122

0
52
91
87

151
350
415
611
566
1 464
1 974

78
198
342
515
463
950
1 363

31
34
39
404
239
482
595

123
214
272
842
2 934
3 996
4 182

206
388
418
795
2 434
4 884
6 117

168
330
347
770
1 110
2 448
3 431

151
223
238
724
676
1 350
1 846

63
131
174
654
344
745
1 040

9
70
135
451
231
415
682

393
408
325

129
142
202

56
71
126

105
73
48

396
483
399

473
442
448

309
262
261

109
157
128

52
60
65

14
29
38

4
6
7
813
857
904
972
1
4
2
6
201
361
651
1 076

7
4
1
408
470
533
590
1
1
1
0
99
190
397
663

3
5
0
300
279
274
329
2
1
0
0
47
113
226
320

10
2
1
213
189
236
221
1

3
1
0
84
77
83
81
0

7
4
5
428
521
709
835
0
0
2
165
249
393
648

5
3
3
283
376
351
332
0
0
1
0
110
225
312
556

7
2
2
203
217
185
217
0
1
0
0
65
92
207
293

4
3
0
126
107
116
136
0
1
0
0
24
49
114
180

15
0
0
72
61
81
105
1

0
0
18
27
54
77

15
5
4
461
540
568
643
1
1
1
0
193
298
518
742

1 999
20 576
20 855
117
352
406
537
151
168
320
350
2 491
3 497
4 075
4 735
4 091
4 836
4 939
4 493
1 668
2 610
3 166

2 135
19 465
19 842
130
249
285
369
123
144
283
358
1 797
2 479
3 209
4 133
2 916
3 430
4 025
4 141
1 124
3 045
2 160

1 146
11 143
12 386
98
138
139
192
82
109
125
217
1 115
1 279
1 576
2 214
1 754
2 022
2 310
2 427
487
435
917

435
4 124
5 155
40
37
57
109
64
48
79
116
602
607
725
905
1 007
1 202
1 279
1 309
231
261
358

212
1 705
2 211
16
17
27
50
49
39
69
80
323
395
539
613
640
834
1 054
1 161
130
174
321

122
2 561
1 933
5
10
14
51
9
13
23
39
402
400
371
401
201
257
271
248
129
150
168

1 283
13 632
13 023
52
198
318
354
80
107
157
163
1 376
1 649
1 811
1 964
1 904
2 106
1 852
1 689
1 125
932
1 507

1 716
19 343
20 205
57
298
453
662
96
124
236
285
1 845
2 782
3 099
2 923
2 532
3 426
3 521
2 988
1 779
1 118
2 463

933
11 338
12 910
39
62
207
276
45
50
146
148
1 104
1 510
1 800
1 691
1 324
1 738
1 892
2 013
717
1 305
1 433

423
5 416
6 873
29
62
73
104
38
36
67
78
635
671
818
924
735
868
968
1 044
257
186
569

167
2 352
3 165
8
24
21
54
23
24
41
62
312
316
389
365
380
494
547
578
117
112
235

80
1 348
2 128
6
5
8
16
15
15
32
29
113
163
257
248
179
269
354
471
63
75
185

2 264
2 208

1 855
1 682

762
761

295
350

656
252

269
173

1 136
974

2 242
2 185

1 255
1 283

578
490

193
265

603
171

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

0
1
22
47
124
254

16

0
0
11
30
47
131

UNKNOWN

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO
1.2
1.1
1.1
1.3
1.7
2.2
2.0
2.1

2.6
2.3
1.9
2.9
2.6
1.4

2.5
1.4
1.3
1.3

1.9
2.6
2.9
1.0
1.2
1.4
1.5

2.1
1.6
1.7

0.7
1.7
2.4
2.3
2.1
2.2
2.3
3.5
2.7
3.0
3.5
1.5
1.5
1.7
1.6

1.4
1.2
1.2
2.4
1.4
1.0
1.0
1.9
1.7
1.5
1.6
1.4
1.3
1.4
1.8
1.8
1.6
1.7
1.7
1.0
2.3
1.3

1.1
1.1

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

African Region

MALE
YEAR

143

144

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

5.6
0.3
0.6
2.5
0.3
0.6
0.8
0
1.1
0

0
0.3

<0.1

0
1.0
0.1
3.3
2.9
0.6
0.5
3.3
0.7
2.3
1.3
0.2
1.3
1.0
1.4

0.4
2.2
0.3
0.2
0.9
0
1.2

0
1.5
4.2
0.8
1.2
0.4

0.8

0.9
0.8
0.7
2.8
0.7
2.0
1.1
3.2
1.7
0.5

0.6
0.6

2.2

3.3
1.5
2.3
1.0
1.7
1.0
0.6
2.6
3.3
0.8
3.6
1.2
1.4
0.5
1.7

1.9
1.4
1.1
0.6
1.8
1.2
0.7

2.5
0.5
1.3
1.8
2.9
1.6

0.9

0.8

0
1.5
4.2
0.8
0.6
0.2

0.4
2.2
0.3
0.1
0.5
0
1.2

0
1.0
0.1
3.3
2.9
0.6
0.5
0
0.5
2.3
0
0.2
0.3
1.0

<0.1

0
0.3

0.4
0.3
0.6
2.5
0
0.6
0.5
0
1.1
0

DST LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

LABORATORIES

CULTURE LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

No
No
In country
No
No
No
No
No
Out of country
Out of country
No
In country
Out of country
No
No
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
No
No
In country
Out of country
No
In country
Out of country
No
In country
In and out of cty
No
No

No

No
No

In country
No
In country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
In and out of cty
Out of country
No
No

SECOND-LINE
DST
AVAILABLE

No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes

NRL

Yes, all suspects


If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
No
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
For smear-positive TB
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

If TB is confirmed

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
No
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

TB DIAGNOSIS

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes

FIRST-LINE DRUGS

FREE THROUGH NTP

Yes

Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No

RIFAMPICIN USED
THROUGHOUT
TREATMENT

100

100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
99
100
100
100
100
90
95
98
100
100
100
0
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100

100

100
100

98
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
0

% OF PATIENTS
TREATED WITH FDCb

DRUG MANAGEMENT

a NRL = national reference laboratory


b FDC = fixed-dose combination
c NURSES (Registered Nurses, Registered Midwives, Enrolled Nurses, Enrolled Midwives); HEALTH ASSISTANTS (Medical Assistants, Clinical Officers); LABORATORY TECHNICIANS (Microscopists)

Algeria
Angola
Benin
Botswana
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Chad
Comoros
Congo
Cte d'Ivoire
Democratic Republic
of the Congo
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Kenya
Lesotho
Liberia
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Nigeria
Rwanda
Sao Tome and Principe
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
South Africa
Swaziland
Togo
Uganda
United Republic of Tanzania
Zambia
Zimbabwe

SMEAR LABS
PER 100K
POPULATION

7$%/($/DERUDWRULHV173VHUYLFHVGUXJPDQDJHPHQWKXPDQUHVRXUFHVDQGLQIHFWLRQFRQWURO

Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

PAEDIATRIC
FORMULATIONS
PROCURED

15

37

25

23
100

63
5

20
0
0

1
0
0

75
1

6
7
60
100

60
3
0

35
5
0

28
41
100
100

0
50

28

29
100
0
0
0

NURSES

0
50

53

0
100
0
0
0

20

MEDICAL
OFFICERS

29

0
0

0
20

10
0
0

70
3
0

0
50

13

100
0
0
0

HEALTH
ASSISTANTS

20

50

64
20

100

22
0

23
0
0

65
12
0

4
50

58

30
100
0
0
0

30

LABORATORY
TECHNICIANS

% OF STAFF TRAINED BY THE NTP (IN 2010)c

408

198
0

55
60

100

31

0
0

1176

49

1587
64

TB NOTIFICATION
RATE PER 100 000
HEALTH-CARE
WORKERS

Region of the Americas


Table A3.1 Estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB, 19902010

147

Table A3.2 Incidence, notication and case detection rates, all forms, 19902010

150

Table A3.3 Case notications, 19902010

153

Table A3.4 Treatment outcomes, new smear-positive cases, 19952009

156

Table A3.5 Treatment outcomes, retreatment cases, 19952009

159

Table A3.6 HIV testing and provision of CPT, ART and IPT, 20052010

162

Table A3.7 Testing for MDR-TB and number of conrmed cases of MDR-TB, 20052010

164

Table A3.8 New smear-positive case notication by age and sex, 19952010

166

Table A3.9 Laboratories, NTP services, drug management, human resources and infection
control, 2010

168

Estimates of mortality, prevalence and incidence


Estimated values are shown as best estimates followed by lower and upper bounds. The lower and upper bounds are
de ned as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of outcome distributions produced in simulations. See ANNEX 1 for further
details.
Estimated numbers are shown rounded to two signicant gures. Estimated rates are shown rounded to three
signicant gures unless the value is under 100, in which case rates are shown rounded to two signicant gures.
Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are re ned, so they
may differ from those published in previous reports in this series. Estimates published in previous global TB control
reports should no longer be used.

Data source
Data shown in this annex are taken from the WHO global TB database on 2 September 2011. Data shown in the main
part of the report were taken from the database on 21 June 2011. As a result, data in this annex may differ slightly from
those in the main part of the report.
Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data.

Country notes
Caribbean Islands
Data from the territories of Anguilla; Bermuda; Bonaire, Saint Eustatius and Saba; British Virgin Islands; Cayman
Islands; Curaao; Montserrat; Sint Maarten (Dutch part); Turks and Caicos Islands; and US Virgin Islands have been
re-introduced with support from the Caribbean Epidemiology Centre (CAREC/PAHO/WHO).

USA
In addition to the 51 reporting areas, the USA includes territories that report separately to WHO. The data for these
territories are not included in the data reported by the USA.
De nitions of case types and outcomes do not exactly match those used by WHO.

146

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Anguilla

Antigua and
Barbuda

Argentina

Aruba

Bahamas

Barbados

Belize

Bermuda

Bolivia
(Plurinational
State of)

Bonaire, Saint
Eustatius and
Saba
Brazil

British Virgin
Islands

Canada

Cayman Islands

Chile

Colombia

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
33
35
37
39
40
40
40
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7
7
8
9
10
10
10

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
1.6
0.99
0.85
0.74
0.62
0.76
0.77
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.011
0.012
0.011
<0.01
0.018
0.019
0.015
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
2.4
2.1
2.1
2
2
2
1.9

2010

<1

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

<1 (<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

150
162
174
186
192
193
195
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
28
29
31
32
33
34
34
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
13
14
15
16
17
17
17
33
36
40
43
45
46
46

13
10
8.2
6.6
6.6
5.4
5
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.12
0.11
0.082
0.086
0.081
0.078
0.078
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.84
0.51
0.31
0.25
0.29
0.28
0.28
1.6
1.9
1.5
1.3
1.5
1.4
1.3

8.9
6.3
4.7
3.6
3.4
2.8
2.6
1.5
1.1
1.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
6.4
3.5
2
1.6
1.7
1.7
1.6
4.8
5.3
3.7
3
3.3
3.1
2.8

170
150
140
110
100
96
92
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
2.9
2.8
2.4
2.1
2
1.8
1.9
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
12
7.9
5.5
4.6
4.5
4.4
4.4
27
29
25
25
24
24
22

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.683)
(0.581.6)
(0.850.86)
(0.740.74)
(0.620.62)
(0.481.1)
(0.51.1)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.026)
(<0.010.021)
(0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0170.018)
(0.0110.035)
(0.010.029)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(14.7)
(1.52.9)
(1.43.1)
(1.33)
(1.32.9)
(1.32.9)
(1.32.8)

(5.427)
(617)
(8.28.2)
(6.66.6)
(6.66.6)
(3.39)
(3.18.3)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.10.14)
(0.0970.14)
(0.0820.082)
(0.0730.1)
(0.070.098)
(0.0690.094)
(0.0670.094)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.521.3)
(0.310.81)
(0.30.31)
(0.250.25)
(0.170.46)
(0.170.45)
(0.160.45)
(0.713.1)
(1.32.7)
(1.51.5)
(1.31.3)
(0.962.1)
(0.92.1)
(0.81.9)

RATEa

2.4
2.1
2.3
2.2
2.1
2
2
5.3
8.9
4.9
5.9
1.9
2.1
<1
4.8
2.8
2.3
1.9
1.6
1.9
1.9
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.9
2
2.5
1.5
1.6
1.6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
6
5.3
4.3
2.5
5.9
6.2
4.9
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
36
28
26
22
21
20
20

(1.43.7)
(1.62.5)
(1.72.9)
(1.62.8)
(1.62.8)
(1.52.5)
(1.52.5)
(4.36.5)
(7.211)
(3.17.3)
(1.415)
(1.52.5)
(1.63.7)
(<11.5)
(2.19.2)
(1.74.7)
(2.32.3)
(1.91.9)
(1.61.6)
(1.22.9)
(1.22.8)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.32.7)
(1.52.5)
(2.42.6)
(1.51.6)
(1.12.3)
(1.22.3)
(<11.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(3.814)
(3.69.5)
(4.14.4)
(2.42.6)
(5.76.1)
(3.611)
(3.29.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1671)
(2039)
(1738)
(1433)
(1430)
(1329)
(1328)

(3.618)
(3.710)
(4.74.7)
(3.63.6)
(3.43.4)
(1.74.7)
(1.64.3)
(1.12.4)
(1.11.2)
(<11.4)
(<11.2)
(<11.2)
(<11.1)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(3.99.7)
(2.15.6)
(22)
(1.51.6)
(12.7)
(<12.7)
(<12.6)
(2.19.5)
(3.77.3)
(3.73.8)
(33.1)
(2.14.7)
(24.5)
(1.74.2)

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
31
23
20
17
16
16
16
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.048
0.056
0.091
0.049
0.054
0.055
0.032
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.012
0.014
<0.01
<0.01
0.088
0.096
0.12
0.13
0.16
0.14
0.13
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
26
24
23
22
22
21
21

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.016)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1161)
(8.540)
(7.535)
(6.730)
(6.327)
(6.827)
(6.927)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.012)
(0.0160.089)
(0.0170.099)
(0.0350.16)
(0.0150.089)
(0.020.098)
(0.0210.098)
(<0.010.057)
(<0.010.014)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.022)
(<0.010.027)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.010.013)
(0.0210.17)
(0.0270.17)
(0.0320.2)
(0.0510.22)
(0.0690.27)
(0.0470.24)
(0.040.23)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(951)
(1039)
(9.939)
(9.537)
(9.336)
(9.236)
(935)

(62350)
(60250)
(56230)
(37180)
(39170)
(35160)
(34160)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1.14.9)
(0.984.7)
(0.844.1)
(0.763.6)
(0.683.3)
(0.573.2)
(0.643.2)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.012)
(521)
(3.114)
(29.6)
(1.78)
(1.87.8)
(1.77.6)
(1.77.5)
(9.152)
(1348)
(1142)
(1141)
(1140)
(1039)
(9.137)

RATE

60
44
56
55
54
44
44
5.3
8.9
6.6
8.1
3.2
4.3
3.1
94
66
55
45
41
41
40
6.2
6.2
6.1
6.1
6.2
6.1
6.2
19
20
31
15
16
16
9.2
3.2
2.6
3.5
4.6
5
2.2
1.9
46
43
46
46
53
45
41
2.7
9
<1
9.2
5.5
3.7
2
390
319
281
243
225
217
209

(22114)
(2171)
(2494)
(2391)
(2290)
(2173)
(2072)
(2.58.4)
(4.214)
(2.611)
(2.419)
(16.3)
(<18.5)
(<16.8)
(33187)
(24116)
(2094)
(1778)
(1669)
(1769)
(1767)
(1.411)
(1.411)
(1.411)
(1.411)
(1.411)
(1.411)
(1.411)
(6.135)
(6.135)
(1254)
(4.728)
(629)
(6.229)
(2.817)
(1.25.2)
(1.14.1)
(1.65.6)
(1.58.2)
(1.910)
(<14.9)
(<14.6)
(1187)
(1276)
(1380)
(1878)
(2390)
(1579)
(1373)
(<14.9)
(3.715)
(<1<1)
(2.716)
(2.39)
(1.46.1)
(<14.3)
(135772)
(134523)
(119473)
(104405)
(97376)
(94364)
(91349)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATE

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
19
17
15
13
12
11
11

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1228)
(1421)
(1218)
(1016)
(9.614)
(9.314)
(9.113)

24
23
23
22
22
21
21
2.6
4.4
4.6
6.5
2.6
3.8
4.9
60
49
40
33
30
28
27

(1536)
(2027)
(1827)
(1826)
(1726)
(1826)
(1725)
(2.23)
(3.75)
(3.85.4)
(5.57.6)
(2.42.7)
(3.24.5)
(4.35.5)
(3886)
(4059)
(3349)
(2740)
(2436)
(2334)
(2233)

0.054
0.077
0.083
0.058
0.054
0.048
0.039
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.013
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.076
0.088
0.1
0.11
0.12
0.12
0.12
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
17
16
15
14
14
14
13

(0.0480.061)
(0.0690.085)
(0.0710.095)
(0.0510.065)
(0.0470.062)
(0.0420.055)
(0.0350.044)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.014)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0520.1)
(0.0720.11)
(0.0810.12)
(0.0970.13)
(0.0970.14)
(0.0990.15)
(0.10.15)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1124)
(1419)
(1218)
(1217)
(1117)
(1116)
(1116)

21
27
28
18
16
14
11
2.4
1.7
2.4
4.7
3.1
2.4
1.7
40
40
40
40
40
40
40
1.6
6
<1
7.5
3.8
2.6
1.6
251
215
184
158
144
140
135

(1924)
(2531)
(2432)
(1620)
(1418)
(1216)
(1013)
(2.12.7)
(1.51.9)
(2.22.6)
(4.15.4)
(2.93.3)
(2.32.5)
(1.42)
(2755)
(3348)
(3348)
(3446)
(3348)
(3248)
(3348)
(<13.1)
(5.17)
(<1<1)
(6.58.6)
(3.34.2)
(2.33)
(1.41.9)
(164357)
(184249)
(150222)
(129190)
(117173)
(114168)
(111162)

130
110
110
95
89
87
85
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
2.3
2.3
2
1.7
1.7
1.6
1.6
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
8.2
5.5
4
3.3
3.2
3.2
3.2
18
18
17
17
16
16
16

(78180)
(94140)
(86130)
(79110)
(73110)
(72100)
(70100)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(22.6)
(22.5)
(1.72.2)
(1.52)
(1.41.9)
(1.41.9)
(1.41.8)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(6.610)
(4.56.7)
(3.24.9)
(2.74.1)
(2.63.9)
(2.63.9)
(2.63.8)
(1225)
(1421)
(1421)
(1320)
(1320)
(1319)
(1319)

84
71
60
51
46
45
43
19
15
12
10
10
9.9
9.7
8.4
7.7
6.4
5.4
5
4.8
4.7
10
4.6
8.4
<1
3.9
6
8.2
62
38
26
20
19
19
19
54
48
43
38
36
35
34

(52122)
(5886)
(4973)
(4361)
(3855)
(3753)
(3651)
(1229)
(1218)
(9.714)
(8.513)
(8.212)
(8.112)
(812)
(7.49.5)
(6.88.7)
(5.67.2)
(4.76)
(4.35.6)
(4.25.5)
(4.15.3)
(911)
(3.85.6)
(6.710)
(<1<1)
(3.44.5)
(5.36.8)
(7.29.2)
(5076)
(3147)
(2132)
(1725)
(1623)
(1523)
(1522)
(3675)
(3958)
(3552)
(3146)
(2943)
(2942)
(2841)

<1 (<1<1)
116
92
78
57
53
50
47
26
17
23
22
21
19
18
11
9.5
7.9
6.6
5.9
5.5
5.6
12
5.7
12
<1
5.6
8.3
12
94
55
36
28
27
26
25
80
79
63
57
54
52
48

(41234)
(37157)
(32133)
(2098)
(2091)
(1884)
(1780)
(7.254)
(3.830)
(1138)
(1036)
(9.735)
(8.631)
(8.430)
(3.918)
(3.316)
(2.813)
(2.411)
(210)
(1.79.4)
(1.99.4)
(3.521)
(1.710)
(4.121)
(<11.7)
(2.29.2)
(3.214)
(5.120)
(38159)
(2195)
(1362)
(1149)
(1146)
(1045)
(9.844)
(28158)
(36131)
(27106)
(2596)
(2490)
(2286)
(2081)

Region of the Americas

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

147

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%
MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Costa Rica

Cuba

Curaao
Dominica

Dominican
Republic

Ecuador

El Salvador

Grenada

Guatemala

Guyana

Haiti

Honduras

Jamaica

Mexico

Montserrat

Netherlands
Antilles

148

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

3
3
4
4
5
5
5
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7
8
9
9
10
10
10
10
11
12
13
14
14
14
5
6
6
6
6
6
6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
9
10
11
13
14
14
14
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7
8
9
9
10
10
10
5
6
6
7
7
7
8
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
84
92
100
106
111
112
113
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.021
0.064
0.072
0.066
0.055
0.046
0.052
0.19
0.065
0.044
0.035
0.035
0.031
0.032
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
2.6
1.5
1.1
0.96
0.92
0.92
0.81
2.2
1.5
1.6
1.2
0.99
0.84
0.97
0.25
0.079
0.16
0.12
0.1
0.065
0.057
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.4
0.45
0.56
0.42
0.38
0.51
0.56
0.16
0.14
0.16
0.14
0.13
0.11
0.097
2.6
3.2
3.5
3.3
2.9
2.9
2.9
0.79
0.91
0.8
0.95
0.69
0.54
0.39
0.012
0.015
0.015
0.023
0.017
0.02
0.016
11
7.5
3.6
2.7
2.4
1.1
0.96
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(0.0110.038)
(0.0360.11)
(0.0710.073)
(0.0650.066)
(0.0540.055)
(0.0460.046)
(0.0290.087)
(0.110.3)
(0.0380.11)
(0.0440.044)
(0.0350.035)
(0.0350.035)
(0.0190.048)
(0.0180.053)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1.54.1)
(12.1)
(0.691.6)
(0.621.4)
(0.61.3)
(0.621.3)
(0.551.1)
(1.13.8)
(0.972.1)
(1.61.6)
(1.21.2)
(0.980.99)
(0.840.85)
(0.71.3)
(0.110.49)
(0.0630.096)
(0.160.16)
(0.110.12)
(0.10.1)
(0.0440.11)
(0.040.093)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.190.71)
(0.330.59)
(0.550.56)
(0.420.42)
(0.380.38)
(0.390.66)
(0.420.71)
(0.0810.28)
(0.0840.21)
(0.0950.25)
(0.130.14)
(0.0710.21)
(0.0650.19)
(0.0580.17)
(1.15.1)
(2.34.2)
(2.54.8)
(2.24.7)
(1.94.3)
(1.94.2)
(1.94)
(0.331.6)
(0.581.3)
(0.521.2)
(0.661.3)
(0.470.97)
(0.350.78)
(0.240.62)
(<0.010.025)
(<0.010.025)
(<0.010.026)
(0.0150.033)
(<0.010.029)
(0.0120.031)
(<0.010.027)
(5.917)
(5.69.8)
(3.63.6)
(2.72.7)
(2.42.4)
(0.81.7)
(0.771.2)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)
<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)
<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

RATEa

<1
1.8
1.8
1.5
1.2
1
1.1
1.8
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.8
1.6
4.9
1.8
3
1.4
3.4
36
19
13
10
9.5
9.4
8.2
21
13
13
9.1
7
5.9
6.7
4.6
1.4
2.6
1.9
1.6
1.1
<1
2.4
1.5
1.3
2.6
<1
<1
<1
4.4
4.5
5
3.3
2.8
3.6
3.9
23
19
22
18
17
15
13
37
40
41
35
30
30
29
16
16
13
14
9.5
7.2
5.2
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
13
8.2
3.6
2.5
2.2
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<11.2)
(13.1)
(1.81.9)
(1.51.5)
(1.21.2)
(11)
(<11.9)
(12.8)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.24.9)
(1.23)
(4.95.1)
(1.52.2)
(1.84.8)
(<14.7)
(2.25)
(2057)
(1326)
(8.118)
(6.715)
(6.214)
(6.413)
(5.512)
(1037)
(8.618)
(1313)
(9.19.2)
(77.1)
(5.95.9)
(4.89)
(29.2)
(1.11.7)
(2.62.7)
(1.91.9)
(1.61.6)
(<11.7)
(<11.5)
(1.43.7)
(1.11.9)
(<11.9)
(2.52.8)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(2.17.9)
(3.35.9)
(4.95)
(3.33.3)
(2.82.8)
(2.84.7)
(2.94.9)
(1138)
(1129)
(1334)
(1819)
(9.528)
(8.726)
(7.722)
(1572)
(2953)
(2955)
(2350)
(1944)
(1943)
(1940)
(6.733)
(1024)
(8.419)
(9.519)
(6.513)
(4.711)
(3.18.2)
(<11)
(<11)
(<11)
(<11.2)
(<11.1)
(<11.1)
(<11)
(721)
(6.111)
(3.63.6)
(2.52.5)
(2.22.2)
(<11.5)
(<11)
(<1<1)
(<11)
(<1<1)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<1 (<1<1)
<1 (<1<1)
<1 (<1<1)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.36
0.99
1.3
1
0.88
0.86
0.84
5.8
2.9
2.1
1.5
1.5
1.4
1.4
<0.01
0.012
0.012
0.02
0.013
0.013
<0.01
0.014
22
15
12
10
9.8
9.8
8.9
31
23
21
18
16
15
15
5.1
2.9
3.1
3.3
2.3
2
1.9
0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
12
13
14
14
14
15
16
0.8
0.78
0.96
0.97
0.96
0.93
0.87
27
29
34
34
32
32
31
8.8
9.9
9.6
9.6
7.2
6.1
5
0.17
0.19
0.19
0.24
0.21
0.23
0.21
100
76
50
35
25
22
21
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.012
<0.01
<0.01

(0.120.64)
(0.371.8)
(0.492.1)
(0.421.7)
(0.341.5)
(0.351.5)
(0.331.5)
(2.311)
(1.15)
(0.763.6)
(0.552.6)
(0.612.5)
(0.542.4)
(0.542.5)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.010.024)
(<0.010.02)
(<0.010.032)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.010.021)
(<0.010.023)
(8.742)
(6.824)
(5.320)
(4.717)
(4.516)
(4.516)
(4.115)
(1261)
(1139)
(9.835)
(8.530)
(7.627)
(724)
(724)
(1.810)
(0.695.1)
(1.35.3)
(1.45.6)
(0.823.9)
(0.643.5)
(0.533.3)
(<0.010.02)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.010.014)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(4.723)
(621)
(6.623)
(6.623)
(6.924)
(724)
(7.526)
(0.321.6)
(0.361.3)
(0.441.7)
(0.361.7)
(0.381.7)
(0.361.6)
(0.321.5)
(9.854)
(1447)
(1655)
(1657)
(1553)
(1553)
(1451)
(3.118)
(4.417)
(4.116)
(4.416)
(3.312)
(2.710)
(28.4)
(0.060.31)
(0.0790.32)
(0.080.33)
(0.110.4)
(0.0820.37)
(0.10.39)
(0.0840.36)
(42200)
(36120)
(2283)
(1560)
(7.842)
(5.537)
(536)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.021)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATE

12
29
32
24
19
19
18
55
27
18
13
13
12
13
5.1
17
16
28
19
19
13
20
302
186
137
113
102
100
90
307
204
170
136
116
104
103
96
50
53
55
38
33
31
11
8
7.4
8.5
4.6
4.4
4.1
134
130
124
110
106
105
111
110
107
131
129
128
123
115
376
364
388
368
326
323
314
180
178
155
140
99
81
65
7.1
7.6
7.4
8.9
7.6
8.4
7.6
123
82
51
33
22
19
18
10
21
13
15
13
<1
<1
<1
2.9
3.7
6.5
<1
<1

(3.921)
(1151)
(1354)
(9.740)
(7.433)
(7.632)
(732)
(22106)
(9.946)
(6.833)
(4.923)
(5.422)
(4.821)
(4.822)
(1.78.8)
(3.734)
(3.628)
(1346)
(4.334)
(7.534)
(3.132)
(8.534)
(121580)
(86309)
(62230)
(51189)
(46168)
(46165)
(41147)
(122595)
(94339)
(79280)
(64225)
(54191)
(49168)
(48167)
(33189)
(1288)
(2289)
(2392)
(1364)
(1056)
(8.653)
(4.221)
(3.713)
(3.312)
(3.914)
(18.2)
(1.19)
(<18.7)
(52262)
(60213)
(58203)
(52180)
(50172)
(50170)
(52179)
(44218)
(49184)
(60226)
(48225)
(50220)
(48208)
(43195)
(138756)
(173599)
(185639)
(170611)
(149541)
(148532)
(145512)
(63361)
(79297)
(66257)
(64231)
(45162)
(36135)
(26111)
(2.513)
(3.213)
(3.113)
(4.215)
(313)
(3.814)
(3.113)
(50237)
(39135)
(2283)
(1456)
(7.138)
(4.933)
(4.432)
(2.318)
(933)
(2.923)
(628)
(2.822)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<15.2)
(<16.5)
(2.211)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

0.26
0.69
0.9
0.75
0.66
0.64
0.63
2.6
2
1.4
1
1
1
1
<0.01
0.01
0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
11
9.6
8.6
7.6
7
6.9
6.7
18
16
13
11
10
9.7
9.4
3.4
2.6
2.2
2.4
2
1.8
1.8
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
6.6
7.1
7.6
8.2
8.6
8.7
8.9
0.65
0.65
0.76
0.86
0.85
0.84
0.84
18
19
23
25
24
24
23
6.1
7
7.2
6.1
4.7
4.3
3.9
0.15
0.16
0.17
0.18
0.18
0.18
0.18
52
41
32
24
21
20
18
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.11
0.054

(0.20.33)
(0.540.86)
(0.751.1)
(0.610.9)
(0.530.8)
(0.520.76)
(0.50.77)
(1.63.9)
(1.62.5)
(1.11.8)
(0.841.3)
(0.811.3)
(0.841.2)
(0.831.3)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(6.516)
(7.812)
(710)
(6.29.2)
(5.78.5)
(5.68.2)
(5.58)
(1127)
(1319)
(1116)
(9.113)
(8.212)
(812)
(7.711)
(2.34.7)
(2.22.9)
(1.82.6)
(1.92.9)
(1.72.3)
(1.62.1)
(1.52)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(4.19.8)
(5.88.6)
(6.29.2)
(6.79.9)
(710)
(7.210)
(7.311)
(0.390.96)
(0.530.78)
(0.620.92)
(0.71)
(0.691)
(0.691)
(0.691)
(1126)
(1623)
(1928)
(2131)
(2029)
(1928)
(1928)
(3.89)
(5.78.4)
(6.18.4)
(57.4)
(3.85.7)
(3.55.1)
(3.24.6)
(0.110.21)
(0.130.19)
(0.140.2)
(0.140.21)
(0.140.21)
(0.150.21)
(0.150.21)
(3177)
(3349)
(2638)
(2029)
(1824)
(1722)
(1621)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(0.0860.13)
(0.0440.065)

RATE

8.5
20
23
17
15
14
13
25
19
13
9.2
9.1
9.1
9.3
4
15
14
14
13
13
13
13
148
121
100
82
73
70
67
174
136
107
83
72
68
65
63
45
37
39
32
30
28
4.6
4.5
4.4
4.2
4.2
4.1
4.1
74
71
68
65
63
62
62
89
89
104
115
113
112
111
247
247
271
272
246
238
230
125
125
116
89
64
58
51
6.5
6.5
6.5
6.5
6.6
6.6
6.6
61
44
32
23
19
17
16
7.9
8.4
8.9
9.4
9.7
9.8
9.9
<1
2.6
3.2
5
54
27

(6.611)
(1625)
(1927)
(1421)
(1218)
(1117)
(1116)
(1537)
(1523)
(1016)
(7.511)
(7.211)
(7.511)
(7.411)
(3.54.5)
(9.222)
(1217)
(1117)
(1116)
(1116)
(1116)
(1116)
(90220)
(99146)
(81120)
(6799)
(5988)
(5784)
(5580)
(106259)
(111164)
(87128)
(68100)
(5887)
(5682)
(5378)
(4289)
(3950)
(3044)
(3247)
(2737)
(2535)
(2433)
(2.86.9)
(3.85.2)
(3.65.3)
(3.45.1)
(3.45)
(3.45)
(3.44.9)
(46110)
(5886)
(5582)
(5378)
(5176)
(5175)
(5174)
(54133)
(73108)
(85125)
(94139)
(92136)
(91134)
(91133)
(151368)
(201298)
(220327)
(221327)
(200297)
(195286)
(189276)
(78183)
(102151)
(99135)
(72107)
(5278)
(4769)
(4261)
(4.68.8)
(5.37.9)
(5.37.9)
(5.37.9)
(5.37.9)
(5.47.9)
(5.47.8)
(3791)
(3653)
(2638)
(1927)
(1621)
(1520)
(1419)
(6.69.3)
(7.98.9)
(<118)
(712)
(<119)
(<120)
(<120)
(<1<1)
(2.33)
(2.83.6)
(4.35.6)
(4465)
(2233)

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Nicaragua

Panama

Paraguay

Peru

Puerto Rico

Saint Kitts and


Nevis

Saint Lucia

Saint Vincent and


the Grenadines

Sint Maarten
(Dutch part)
Suriname

Trinidad and
Tobago

Turks and Caicos


Islands

United States
of America

Uruguay

US Virgin Islands

Venezuela
(Bolivarian
Republic of)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

4
5
5
5
6
6
6
2
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
6
6
22
24
26
28
28
29
29
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

0.67
0.5
0.44
0.38
0.22
0.18
0.15
0.37
0.22
0.2
0.22
0.22
0.29
0.3
0.25
0.24
0.24
0.3
0.24
0.28
0.27
11
6.3
4.9
3.4
2.3
2
1.8
0.016
0.023
0.015
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

2010

<1

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

<1 (<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
253
266
282
297
305
308
310
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
20
22
24
27
28
29
29

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.011
0.013
0.014
0.015
0.024
0.031
0.029
0.022
0.039
0.04
0.037
<0.01

(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.011)
(<0.010.016)
(0.010.018)
(0.0110.019)
(0.0210.029)
(0.0250.038)
(0.0290.029)
(0.0210.022)
(0.0330.047)
(0.0330.049)
(0.0320.045)
(<0.01<0.01)

1.7
1.1
1.4
2.2
2.5
2.6
2.8
2
2.4
2.2
1.6
2.9
3
2.8
<1

(<12.7)
(<11.4)
(1.41.4)
(2.22.3)
(1.83.2)
(23.4)
(2.13.7)
(1.72.4)
(23)
(2.22.3)
(1.61.7)
(2.53.6)
(2.43.7)
(2.43.4)
(<1<1)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
1.3
1.1
0.79
0.66
0.63
0.59
0.55
0.055
0.081
0.07
0.058
0.046
0.04
0.036
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1.11.6)
(0.961.4)
(0.790.79)
(0.660.66)
(0.540.76)
(0.510.7)
(0.480.66)
(0.0350.15)
(0.0470.13)
(0.0690.07)
(0.0340.098)
(0.0310.072)
(0.0280.063)
(0.0260.061)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

5.1
2
1.8
1.7
1.3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.8
2.5
2.1
1.7
1.4
1.2
1.1
<1
<1

(4.36.1)
(1.72.4)
(1.52.1)
(1.52)
(<12.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.14.7)
(1.54.2)
(2.12.1)
(13)
(<12.1)
(<11.9)
(<11.8)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

(0.261.1)
(0.421)
(0.640.64)
(0.630.63)
(0.471.1)
(0.511.2)
(0.541.2)

2.8
3.1
2.6
2.4
2.7
2.8
2.8

(1.35.4)
(1.94.7)
(2.62.6)
(2.42.4)
(1.74)
(1.84.1)
(1.94.1)

0.57
0.4
0.62
0.82
1.1
1.1
1.2
0.17
0.23
0.23
0.27
0.29
0.33
0.29
<0.01
<0.01
0.017
0.01
0.011
0.01
<0.01
36
31
22
19
18
16
15
0.99
1.1
1
0.89
0.81
0.78
0.75
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
10
12
12
13
13
14
14

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.54
0.67
0.64
0.63
0.75
0.79
0.82

(0.31.3)
(0.310.77)
(0.270.66)
(0.240.57)
(0.140.36)
(0.120.3)
(0.110.25)
(0.170.73)
(0.130.43)
(0.20.21)
(0.180.27)
(0.220.22)
(0.20.44)
(0.20.46)
(0.20.32)
(0.190.29)
(0.190.29)
(0.30.3)
(0.240.25)
(0.220.35)
(0.210.33)
(4.822)
(3.710)
(2.88.1)
(2.15.6)
(1.63.5)
(1.53.2)
(1.42.2)
(0.0140.018)
(0.020.028)
(0.0130.018)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

RATEa

16
11
8.6
7
4
3.2
2.6
15
8.3
6.9
6.9
6.5
8.3
8.6
5.9
5
4.4
5.1
3.9
4.4
4.2
53
26
19
12
8.1
7
6.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
11
2.2
<1
2.5
2.2
4.7
4
1.6
<1
4
2.5
<1
1.8
4.8
4
3.1
1
1
<1
2

(7.232)
(6.717)
(5.313)
(4.410)
(2.56.4)
(2.25.3)
(1.94.2)
(7.130)
(4.816)
(6.86.9)
(5.68.4)
(6.46.5)
(5.713)
(5.813)
(4.67.5)
(46.1)
(3.55.5)
(5.15.2)
(3.94)
(3.45.5)
(3.35.2)
(22102)
(1543)
(1131)
(7.720)
(5.712)
(5.211)
(57.4)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(8.214)
(2.22.3)
(<1<1)
(23)
(1.73.7)
(3.85.7)
(3.34.8)
(1.32.2)
(<1<1)
(3.94.1)
(1.14.8)
(<1<1)
(1.42.2)
(2.97.2)
(3.15)
(33.2)
(<11.1)
(<11.1)
(<12.5)
(<13.7)

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

7.1
5.8
5
4.3
3.2
3
2.7
1.6
1.4
1.4
1.7
1.7
1.8
1.8
3.9
3.6
3.6
4
4.2
4.2
4.1
120
79
63
48
39
36
34
0.24
0.39
0.24
0.13
0.13
0.08
0.11
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.038
0.026
0.034
0.024
0.031
0.012
0.021
0.071
0.063
0.053
0.048
0.033
0.019
0.036

(2.514)
(2.39.9)
(28.5)
(1.87.3)
(1.15.6)
(0.875.1)
(0.694.7)
(0.553.1)
(0.442.4)
(0.392.4)
(0.462.9)
(0.512.8)
(0.593)
(0.623.1)
(1.66.3)
(1.55.7)
(1.55.9)
(1.76.4)
(1.76.7)
(1.86.7)
(1.76.6)
(41230)
(29140)
(22110)
(1684)
(1067)
(9.163)
(7.961)
(0.0650.42)
(0.140.66)
(0.0810.42)
(0.0470.23)
(0.0510.22)
(0.0220.14)
(0.0450.19)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0170.061)
(<0.010.046)
(0.0150.053)
(<0.010.039)
(0.0120.058)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.010.034)
(0.0270.14)
(0.0290.1)
(0.0250.088)
(0.020.09)
(0.0130.066)
(<0.010.049)
(0.0140.073)

(0.231.1)
(0.180.67)
(0.291)
(0.381.4)
(0.491.7)
(0.531.9)
(0.582.1)
(0.0550.29)
(0.0860.4)
(0.0810.39)
(0.120.44)
(0.10.5)
(0.140.54)
(0.10.48)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.028)
(<0.010.017)
(<0.010.018)
(<0.010.018)
(<0.010.019)
(1260)
(1153)
(7.838)
(6.832)
(6.330)
(5.827)
(525)
(0.232)
(0.412)
(0.371.8)
(0.321.5)
(0.271.4)
(0.241.3)
(0.221.3)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.010.014)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(3.219)
(4.720)
(4.421)
(4.923)
(5.622)
(623)
(6.123)

RATE

172
125
99
79
57
52
47
68
51
47
53
49
52
52
92
75
68
68
67
66
64
532
330
244
176
136
126
118
6.9
11
6.4
3.5
3.4
2.1
3
1.3
22
4
2.2
9.3
8.1
11
28
18
22
14
18
6.8
12
66
58
49
44
30
17
33

(61339)
(50213)
(39168)
(33134)
(1999)
(1590)
(1281)
(23130)
(1790)
(1383)
(1491)
(1583)
(1787)
(1888)
(37149)
(32119)
(28110)
(28109)
(28107)
(28106)
(26103)
(1911078)
(122570)
(86425)
(58305)
(37235)
(31218)
(27210)
(1.812)
(3.718)
(2.111)
(1.26)
(1.45.7)
(<13.8)
(1.25.1)
(<12.4)
(9.935)
(<17.1)
(<14)
(2.117)
(1.816)
(4.619)
(1244)
(4.332)
(9.833)
(5.224)
(6.834)
(1.913)
(5.419)
(25126)
(2796)
(2381)
(1883)
(1260)
(4.545)
(1367)

12 (3.722)
140
92
133
164
205
221
238
14
19
18
20
22
25
21
<1
<1
90
33
29
28
23
14
12
8
6.4
5.8
5.3
4.8
32
35
31
27
24
23
22
5.7
7.5
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
51
53
49
49
47
48
48

(56267)
(42154)
(62221)
(76272)
(95340)
(102368)
(110396)
(4.524)
(6.831)
(6.330)
(8.833)
(7.637)
(1041)
(7.636)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(36149)
(1156)
(9.850)
(9.448)
(5.750)
(4.924)
(4.120)
(2.713)
(2.311)
(2.19.7)
(1.98.9)
(1.68.2)
(7.464)
(1360)
(1154)
(9.547)
(841)
(7.239)
(6.438)
(1.99.8)
(1.713)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1697)
(2191)
(1885)
(1885)
(2079)
(2180)
(2180)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

4.4
4
3.4
2.9
2.6
2.5
2.4
1.1
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.6
1.7
2.8
2.5
2.6
2.9
3
3
3
69
58
48
39
34
32
31
0.21
0.3
0.19
0.13
0.1
0.091
0.083
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.026
0.024
0.021
0.018
0.015
0.015
0.014
0.029
0.029
0.028
0.027
0.027
0.027
0.027

(2.96.3)
(3.24.8)
(2.84.1)
(2.43.5)
(2.23)
(2.22.9)
(2.12.8)
(0.781.6)
(11.5)
(1.21.7)
(1.31.9)
(1.41.8)
(1.41.9)
(1.51.9)
(2.63)
(2.32.7)
(2.42.8)
(2.73.1)
(2.73.2)
(2.73.2)
(2.73.2)
(42100)
(4769)
(3957)
(3245)
(3038)
(2837)
(2735)
(0.190.23)
(0.260.34)
(0.170.22)
(0.110.15)
(0.0890.12)
(0.0820.1)
(0.0720.095)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0240.028)
(0.0220.025)
(0.020.022)
(0.0160.02)
(0.0120.019)
(0.0130.016)
(0.0130.015)
(0.0180.044)
(0.0230.035)
(0.0230.034)
(0.0220.033)
(0.0220.032)
(0.0220.032)
(0.0220.032)

RATE

108
85
68
53
46
44
42
47
47
47
47
47
48
48
66
52
49
49
48
47
46
317
242
184
140
119
113
106
5.9
8
5
3.4
2.7
2.4
2.2
2.7
13
7.9
4.2
6.6
7.2
7.6
19
16
13
11
9
8.5
7.9
27
27
26
25
25
24
24

(70153)
(69103)
(5581)
(4464)
(4054)
(3851)
(3649)
(3265)
(3957)
(3956)
(3957)
(4253)
(4253)
(4254)
(6172)
(4856)
(4553)
(4553)
(4452)
(4351)
(4250)
(193472)
(197291)
(150221)
(118165)
(104135)
(98128)
(93121)
(5.36.6)
(79.1)
(4.35.7)
(33.9)
(2.43.1)
(2.22.7)
(1.92.5)
(<15.5)
(1115)
(<116)
(<18.4)
(5.38.1)
(6.18.4)
(7.18.2)
(1720)
(1517)
(1314)
(9.412)
(7.311)
(7.69.3)
(7.28.7)
(1741)
(2232)
(2131)
(2030)
(2030)
(2029)
(2029)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

9.1 (7.910)

0.27
0.22
0.37
0.5
0.65
0.7
0.76
0.14
0.19
0.23
0.19
0.32
0.31
0.25
<0.01
<0.01
0.012
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
30
26
19
16
15
14
13
0.86
0.84
0.81
0.76
0.74
0.73
0.72
<0.01
<0.01

66
51
80
100
125
135
145
11
15
18
15
24
23
19
<1
37
64
25
23
22
21
12
9.8
6.7
5.5
4.8
4.4
4.1
28
26
24
23
22
22
21
4.5
4.3

7
7.7
8.3
9
9.4
9.5
9.7

(0.160.4)
(0.180.27)
(0.30.45)
(0.40.6)
(0.530.78)
(0.570.84)
(0.620.91)
(0.120.16)
(0.170.22)
(0.20.26)
(0.170.22)
(0.280.36)
(0.270.35)
(0.220.29)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.014)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(2634)
(2330)
(1721)
(1418)
(1317)
(1215)
(1114)
(0.521.3)
(0.681)
(0.660.98)
(0.620.91)
(0.640.84)
(0.630.83)
(0.620.84)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

(4.99.4)
(6.29.2)
(6.810)
(7.311)
(7.611)
(7.811)
(7.912)

35
35
34
34
33
33
33

(4098)
(4262)
(6596)
(81120)
(102151)
(110162)
(118173)
(9.913)
(1317)
(1520)
(1316)
(2127)
(2126)
(1621)
(<1<1)
(3242)
(5672)
(2229)
(2026)
(1925)
(1824)
(1013)
(8.611)
(5.97.6)
(4.86.2)
(4.25.4)
(3.95)
(3.64.7)
(1741)
(2131)
(2029)
(1927)
(1925)
(1925)
(1825)
(3.95)
(3.74.9)

Region of the Americas

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

(2548)
(2842)
(2841)
(2741)
(2740)
(2740)
(2740)

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

149

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Anguilla

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
33
35
37
39
40
40
40
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7
7
8
9
10
10
10

Bonaire, Saint
2010
Eustatius and Saba
Brazil
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
British Virgin
1990
Islands
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Canada
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Cayman Islands
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Chile
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Colombia
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

150
162
174
186
192
193
195
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
28
29
31
32
33
34
34
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
13
14
15
16
17
17
17
33
36
40
43
45
46
46

Antigua and
Barbuda

Argentina

Aruba

Bahamas

Barbados

Belize

Bermuda

Bolivia
(Plurinational
State of)

150

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATEb

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
19
17
15
13
12
11
11

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1228)
(1421)
(1218)
(1016)
(9.614)
(9.314)
(9.113)

24
23
23
22
22
21
21
2.6
4.4
4.6
6.5
2.6
3.8
4.9
60
49
40
33
30
28
27

(1536)
(2027)
(1827)
(1826)
(1726)
(1826)
(1725)
(2.23)
(3.75)
(3.85.4)
(5.57.6)
(2.42.7)
(3.24.5)
(4.35.5)
(3886)
(4059)
(3349)
(2740)
(2436)
(2334)
(2233)

0.054
0.077
0.083
0.058
0.054
0.048
0.039
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.013
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.076
0.088
0.1
0.11
0.12
0.12
0.12
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
17
16
15
14
14
14
13

(0.0480.061)
(0.0690.085)
(0.0710.095)
(0.0510.065)
(0.0470.062)
(0.0420.055)
(0.0350.044)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.014)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0520.1)
(0.0720.11)
(0.0810.12)
(0.0970.13)
(0.0970.14)
(0.0990.15)
(0.10.15)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1124)
(1419)
(1218)
(1217)
(1117)
(1116)
(1116)

21
27
28
18
16
14
11
2.4
1.7
2.4
4.7
3.1
2.4
1.7
40
40
40
40
40
40
40
1.6
6
<1
7.5
3.8
2.6
1.6
251
215
184
158
144
140
135

(1924)
(2531)
(2432)
(1620)
(1418)
(1216)
(1013)
(2.12.7)
(1.51.9)
(2.22.6)
(4.15.4)
(2.93.3)
(2.32.5)
(1.42)
(2755)
(3348)
(3348)
(3446)
(3348)
(3248)
(3348)
(<13.1)
(5.17)
(<1<1)
(6.58.6)
(3.34.2)
(2.33)
(1.41.9)
(164357)
(184249)
(150222)
(129190)
(117173)
(114168)
(111162)

130
110
110
95
89
87
85
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
2.3
2.3
2
1.7
1.7
1.6
1.6
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
8.2
5.5
4
3.3
3.2
3.2
3.2
18
18
17
17
16
16
16

(78180)
(94140)
(86130)
(79110)
(73110)
(72100)
(70100)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(22.6)
(22.5)
(1.72.2)
(1.52)
(1.41.9)
(1.41.9)
(1.41.8)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(6.610)
(4.56.7)
(3.24.9)
(2.74.1)
(2.63.9)
(2.63.9)
(2.63.8)
(1225)
(1421)
(1421)
(1320)
(1320)
(1319)
(1319)

84
71
60
51
46
45
43
19
15
12
10
10
9.9
9.7
8.4
7.7
6.4
5.4
5
4.8
4.7
10
4.6
8.4
<1
3.9
6
8.2
62
38
26
20
19
19
19
54
48
43
38
36
35
34

(52122)
(5886)
(4973)
(4361)
(3855)
(3753)
(3651)
(1229)
(1218)
(9.714)
(8.513)
(8.212)
(8.112)
(812)
(7.49.5)
(6.88.7)
(5.67.2)
(4.76)
(4.35.6)
(4.25.5)
(4.15.3)
(911)
(3.85.6)
(6.710)
(<1<1)
(3.44.5)
(5.36.8)
(7.29.2)
(5076)
(3147)
(2132)
(1725)
(1623)
(1523)
(1522)
(3675)
(3958)
(3552)
(3146)
(2943)
(2942)
(2841)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

4.1 (1.27.2)

<0.01
0.71
0.74
0.79
0.81
0.8
0.78
0.76

(<0.01<0.01)
(0.361.2)
(0.441.1)
(0.491.2)
(0.511.2)
(0.491.2)
(0.491.1)
(0.481.1)

3.9
2.2
2.1
2.1
2.1
2
1.9
1.9

(1.95)
(1.13.6)
(1.33.2)
(1.33.1)
(1.33)
(1.23)
(1.22.8)
(1.22.7)

0.024
0.033
0.031
0.023
0.019
0.018
0.017
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.01
0.016
0.027
0.024
0.023
0.025

(0.0160.034)
(0.0240.043)
(0.020.044)
(0.0160.032)
(0.0120.029)
(0.0110.026)
(0.0110.024)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.014)
(0.0110.021)
(0.0180.037)
(0.0150.037)
(0.0140.036)
(0.0170.036)

9.4
12
10
7.2
5.8
5.3
4.8
<1
<1
<1
1.4
1.2
1
<1
1.4
4.6
6.3
9.5
8.2
7.6
8.1

(6.313)
(8.615)
(6.815)
(4.910)
(3.68.6)
(3.47.7)
(3.16.9)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<12.2)
(<11.8)
(<11.8)
(<11.9)
(<12.2)
(36.5)
(4.48.4)
(6.313)
(4.912)
(4.412)
(5.311)

0.33
0.45
0.59
0.52
0.47
0.46
0.45

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

NUMBER

0
20

1
1
0
4
6
1
3
6
12 309
13 450
11 767
9 770
9 196
7 701
7 287

7
2
0
5
7
1
3
7
38
39
32
25
23
19
18

6
46
57
82
48
48
45
31
5
3
3

6
18
20
28
15
14
13
9
2
1
1

3
2
6
57
95
106
102
88
88
145
0
4
0

1
<1
2
30
43
42
36
29
29
47
0
7
0

2
168
193
122
107
94
91
84

PERCENT

0
88

31
63
0
113
110
45
89
137
63
79
79
76
78
68
66

85
74
99
83
88
94
79
81
67
47

36
31
130
75
108
106
91
74
72
116
0
108

94
67
90
66
67
66
65
62

4.9
6
7.1
5.7
4.9
4.7
4.5

(1.89.5)
(3.59.2)
(4.211)
(3.48.5)
(2.97.5)
(2.77.2)
(2.66.9)

1
11 166
14 422
10 127
9 748
9 070
8 847
8 345
0

(1134)
(1228)
(1125)
(1420)
(1521)
(1521)
(1522)

14
12
10
9.2
9.2
9.3
9.3

(7.123)
(7.217)
(6.215)
(7.811)
(7.611)
(7.711)
(7.711)

74 570
91 013
77 899
80 209
73 395
75 040
74 395

50
56
45
43
38
39
38

1
0

5
0

1
1 968
1 921
1 667
1 484
1 452
1 505
1 322
2
2
5

4
7
7
5
5
4
4
4
8
6
12

4
6 151
4 150
3 021
2 505
2 427
2 398
2 376
12 447
9 912
11 630
10 360
11 344
11 324
11 420

7
47
29
20
15
14
14
14
37
27
29
24
25
25
25

60
79
74
84
82
86
88

41
0

44
85
85
85
86
88
93
83
76
132
147

87
75
75
75
75
75
75
75
70
57
68
63
70
70
72

0.14
0.14
0.14
0.14
0.14
0.14
0.14

(0.0930.2)
(0.0920.21)
(0.0930.2)
(0.0930.2)
(0.110.18)
(0.120.16)
(0.0920.2)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

0.048
0.097
0.15
0.18
0.19
0.19
0.19
0.44
1.1
1.4
1.1
1.1
1.1
1.1

(0.0140.1)
(0.0430.17)
(0.0890.23)
(0.110.26)
(0.120.28)
(0.120.28)
(0.120.28)
(0.230.71)
(0.671.7)
(0.892)
(0.921.4)
(0.761.4)
(0.561.8)
(0.751.5)

<1
<1
<1
1.1
1.1
1.1
1.1
1.3
3
3.5
2.6
2.4
2.4
2.4

(<1<1)
(<11.2)
(<11.5)
(<11.6)
(<11.7)
(<11.7)
(<11.7)
(<12.1)
(1.84.5)
(2.25.1)
(2.13.2)
(1.73.2)
(1.23.9)
(1.63.3)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

0
2

CASE DETECTION RATEa

(0.120.63)
(0.260.69)
(0.350.89)
(0.310.78)
(0.280.72)
(0.270.71)
(0.260.68)

<1
21
19
17
17
18
18
18

RATEb

(75104)

(2637)
(5474)
(96134)
(94130)
(4248)
(75107)
(122156)
(4499)
(6597)
(6597)
(6393)
(6596)
(5682)
(5580)

(7596)
(6783)
(86115)
(7495)
(78101)
(82108)
(7189)
(7292)
(6174)
(4350)
(3438)
(3032)
(108159)
(55109)
(89133)
(88130)
(79106)
(6190)
(6089)
(97143)
(93127)

(83109)
(47102)
(78105)
(5581)
(5683)
(5481)
(5479)
(5276)

(4195)
(6697)
(6191)
(71101)
(69100)
(73104)
(74106)

(3450)

(3754)
(7596)
(7597)
(7597)
(7698)
(77100)
(81107)
(7494)
(6886)
(110162)
(120185)

(7799)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(50105)
(4770)
(5684)
(5277)
(5886)
(5986)
(6087)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV

Costa Rica

Cuba

Curaao
Dominica

Dominican
Republic

Ecuador

El Salvador

Grenada

Guatemala

Guyana

Haiti

Honduras

Jamaica

Mexico

Montserrat

Netherlands
Antilles

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009

3
3
4
4
5
5
5
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7
8
9
9
10
10
10
10
11
12
13
14
14
14
5
6
6
6
6
6
6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
9
10
11
13
14
14
14
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7
8
9
9
10
10
10
5
6
6
7
7
7
8
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
84
92
100
106
111
112
113
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.26
0.69
0.9
0.75
0.66
0.64
0.63
2.6
2
1.4
1
1
1
1
<0.01
0.01
0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
11
9.6
8.6
7.6
7
6.9
6.7
18
16
13
11
10
9.7
9.4
3.4
2.6
2.2
2.4
2
1.8
1.8
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
6.6
7.1
7.6
8.2
8.6
8.7
8.9
0.65
0.65
0.76
0.86
0.85
0.84
0.84
18
19
23
25
24
24
23
6.1
7
7.2
6.1
4.7
4.3
3.9
0.15
0.16
0.17
0.18
0.18
0.18
0.18
52
41
32
24
21
20
18
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.11
0.054

(0.20.33)
(0.540.86)
(0.751.1)
(0.610.9)
(0.530.8)
(0.520.76)
(0.50.77)
(1.63.9)
(1.62.5)
(1.11.8)
(0.841.3)
(0.811.3)
(0.841.2)
(0.831.3)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(6.516)
(7.812)
(710)
(6.29.2)
(5.78.5)
(5.68.2)
(5.58)
(1127)
(1319)
(1116)
(9.113)
(8.212)
(812)
(7.711)
(2.34.7)
(2.22.9)
(1.82.6)
(1.92.9)
(1.72.3)
(1.62.1)
(1.52)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(4.19.8)
(5.88.6)
(6.29.2)
(6.79.9)
(710)
(7.210)
(7.311)
(0.390.96)
(0.530.78)
(0.620.92)
(0.71)
(0.691)
(0.691)
(0.691)
(1126)
(1623)
(1928)
(2131)
(2029)
(1928)
(1928)
(3.89)
(5.78.4)
(6.18.4)
(57.4)
(3.85.7)
(3.55.1)
(3.24.6)
(0.110.21)
(0.130.19)
(0.140.2)
(0.140.21)
(0.140.21)
(0.150.21)
(0.150.21)
(3177)
(3349)
(2638)
(2029)
(1824)
(1722)
(1621)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(0.0860.13)
(0.0440.065)

RATEb

8.5
20
23
17
15
14
13
25
19
13
9.2
9.1
9.1
9.3
4
15
14
14
13
13
13
13
148
121
100
82
73
70
67
174
136
107
83
72
68
65
63
45
37
39
32
30
28
4.6
4.5
4.4
4.2
4.2
4.1
4.1
74
71
68
65
63
62
62
89
89
104
115
113
112
111
247
247
271
272
246
238
230
125
125
116
89
64
58
51
6.5
6.5
6.5
6.5
6.6
6.6
6.6
61
44
32
23
19
17
16
7.9
8.4
8.9
9.4
9.7
9.8
9.9
<1
2.6
3.2
5
54
27

(6.611)
(1625)
(1927)
(1421)
(1218)
(1117)
(1116)
(1537)
(1523)
(1016)
(7.511)
(7.211)
(7.511)
(7.411)
(3.54.5)
(9.222)
(1217)
(1117)
(1116)
(1116)
(1116)
(1116)
(90220)
(99146)
(81120)
(6799)
(5988)
(5784)
(5580)
(106259)
(111164)
(87128)
(68100)
(5887)
(5682)
(5378)
(4289)
(3950)
(3044)
(3247)
(2737)
(2535)
(2433)
(2.86.9)
(3.85.2)
(3.65.3)
(3.45.1)
(3.45)
(3.45)
(3.44.9)
(46110)
(5886)
(5582)
(5378)
(5176)
(5175)
(5174)
(54133)
(73108)
(85125)
(94139)
(92136)
(91134)
(91133)
(151368)
(201298)
(220327)
(221327)
(200297)
(195286)
(189276)
(78183)
(102151)
(99135)
(72107)
(5278)
(4769)
(4261)
(4.68.8)
(5.37.9)
(5.37.9)
(5.37.9)
(5.37.9)
(5.47.9)
(5.47.8)
(3791)
(3653)
(2638)
(1927)
(1621)
(1520)
(1419)
(6.69.3)
(7.98.9)
(<118)
(712)
(<119)
(<120)
(<120)
(<1<1)
(2.33)
(2.83.6)
(4.35.6)
(4465)
(2233)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
0.036
0.095
0.06
0.062
0.07
<0.01
0.01
0.02
0.018
0.068
0.074
0.074

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.02)
(0.020.057)
(0.0670.13)
(0.0410.082)
(0.0370.092)
(0.0430.1)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.021)
(<0.010.034)
(0.010.029)
(0.0390.1)
(0.0540.096)
(0.0540.098)

<1
<1
<1
2.2
1.3
1.3
1.5
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.4)
(1.63)
(<11.8)
(<12)
(<12.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

3.3 (<19.7)

0.83
1.7
1.7
1.4
1.3
1.1
1.5
1.6
2.3
2
1.6
1.4
1.8
1.2
0.062
0.13
0.19
0.22
0.23
0.23
0.23

12
21
20
16
14
11
15
16
21
16
12
9.7
13
8.2
1.2
2.2
3.1
3.6
3.7
3.7
3.7

<0.01
<0.01
0.1
0.36
0.73
1.1
1.5
1.5
1
0.29
0.27
0.24
0.22
0.21
0.2
0.2
2.3
5.9
6.5
6.2
5.8
5.3
4.6
0.69
0.99
0.93
0.64
0.55
0.52
0.49
0.047
0.05
0.052
0.051
0.047
0.046
0.045
2.5
1.9
1.5
1.1
1
0.98
0.92

(0.132.1)
(0.972.5)
(1.12.4)
(0.982)
(0.91.9)
(0.881.3)
(1.21.8)
(0.633.1)
(1.43.5)
(1.22.9)
(0.952.4)
(0.822.1)
(1.52.2)
(0.961.4)
(0.0220.12)
(0.0760.2)
(0.110.27)
(0.160.29)
(0.190.28)
(0.190.28)
(0.20.27)

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0280.23)
(0.170.6)
(0.441.1)
(0.651.5)
(1.21.8)
(1.21.8)
(0.821.3)
(0.160.46)
(0.180.37)
(0.150.36)
(0.180.26)
(0.160.26)
(0.150.26)
(0.150.25)
(0.964.3)
(4.27.8)
(4.78.6)
(4.58.3)
(4.37.6)
(3.77.1)
(3.85.5)
(0.371.1)
(0.641.4)
(0.591.3)
(0.40.95)
(0.420.7)
(0.410.65)
(0.390.61)
(0.0290.069)
(0.0340.07)
(0.0360.072)
(0.0310.075)
(0.0320.065)
(0.0290.067)
(0.0310.061)
(1.34.1)
(1.22.8)
(0.912.1)
(0.711.7)
(0.661.5)
(0.731.3)
(0.681.2)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<1
1
1.2
3.6
6.5
8.3
11
11
7.2
40
36
33
30
28
27
26
33
75
75
67
60
54
46
14
18
15
9.4
7.6
7
6.5
2
2
2
1.9
1.7
1.7
1.6
3
2.1
1.5
1.1
<1
<1
<1

(1.930)
(1232)
(1328)
(1122)
(9.319)
(914)
(1218)
(6.130)
(1330)
(9.723)
(7.118)
(5.815)
(1015)
(6.610)
(<12.3)
(1.33.4)
(1.94.6)
(2.64.8)
(34.5)
(34.5)
(3.14.4)

(<12.7)
(<13)
(<12.6)
(1.76)
(3.99.6)
(5.112)
(8.713)
(8.513)
(5.78.8)
(2264)
(2550)
(2049)
(2435)
(2134)
(2134)
(2033)
(1461)
(5499)
(54100)
(4889)
(4478)
(3872)
(3855)
(7.523)
(1125)
(9.522)
(5.814)
(5.89.6)
(5.68.7)
(5.18)
(1.22.9)
(1.42.8)
(1.42.8)
(1.22.8)
(1.22.4)
(12.5)
(1.12.2)
(1.54.9)
(1.33)
(<12.1)
(<11.6)
(<11.3)
(<11.1)
(<11.1)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

NUMBER

RATEb

230
586
585
534
501
443
490
546
1 553
1 183
770
817
712
827
5
6
8

7
17
15
12
11
10
11
5
14
11
7
7
6
7
3
8
11

13
4
8
2 597
4 053
5 291
5 003
4 280
4 256
3 964
8 243
7 893
6 908
4 416
4 845
4 703
4 832
2 367
2 422
1 485
1 794
1 718
1 686
1 700
0
4
0

19
6
12
36
51
62
54
44
43
40
80
69
56
33
34
33
33
44
42
25
30
28
27
27
0
4
0

5
5
4
3 813
3 119
2 913
3 365
3 246
2 902
3 322
168
296
422
639
653
763
712

5
5
4
43
31
26
26
24
21
23
23
41
58
86
87
101
94

6 212
10 420
14 311
14 602

79
121
153
150

14 222
3 647
4 984
6 406
3 333
2 829
2 924
2 876
123
109
127
90
105
139
130
14 437
11 329
18 434
18 524
18 810
18 846
19 570
1

142
75
89
103
48
39
39
38
5
4
5
3
4
5
5
17
12
18
17
17
17
17
9

0
1

0
18

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

88
85
65
71
76
70
78
21
76
83
74
80
69
79
87
57
78

144
45
90
24
42
62
66
61
62
59
46
51
53
39
48
48
51
70
95
68
76
88
92
96
0
89
0

116
116
93
57
44
38
41
38
33
37
26
45
55
74
77
91
85

32
44
56
61

62
60
71
89
55
60
68
74
79
68
75
51
59
78
72
28
28
58
76
91
96
106
118

0
190

87

(70114)
(68109)
(5578)
(5987)
(6294)
(5885)
(6498)
(1435)
(6395)
(67105)
(6191)
(65101)
(5884)
(65100)
(77100)
(3992)
(6596)

(119177)
(3755)
(75110)
(1640)
(3552)
(5176)
(5581)
(5075)
(5276)
(5072)
(3176)
(4263)
(4465)
(3349)
(4059)
(4059)
(4363)
(50105)
(84108)
(5683)
(6393)
(76104)
(79108)
(83113)
(77104)

(96142)
(96142)
(77113)
(3993)
(3654)
(3247)
(3450)
(3146)
(2841)
(3146)
(1743)
(3856)
(4668)
(6291)
(6495)
(75111)
(71104)
(2639)
(3755)
(4769)
(5075)

Region of the Americas

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

(5275)
(4195)
(5988)
(77104)
(4567)
(5074)
(5783)
(6290)
(59113)
(5683)
(6292)
(4363)
(4972)
(6595)
(6188)
(1946)
(2334)
(4872)
(6394)
(80104)
(84112)
(91124)
(100142)

(146256)

(77100)

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

151

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Nicaragua

Panama

Paraguay

Peru

Puerto Rico

Saint Kitts and


Nevis

Saint Lucia

Saint Vincent and


the Grenadines

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

Sint Maarten (Dutch


2010
part)
Suriname
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Trinidad and
1990
Tobago
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Turks and Caicos
1990
Islands
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
United States
1990
of America
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Uruguay
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
US Virgin Islands
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Venezuela
1990
(Bolivarian
1995
Republic of)
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

152

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

4
5
5
5
6
6
6
2
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
6
6
22
24
26
28
28
29
29
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

4.4
4
3.4
2.9
2.6
2.5
2.4
1.1
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.6
1.7
2.8
2.5
2.6
2.9
3
3
3
69
58
48
39
34
32
31
0.21
0.3
0.19
0.13
0.1
0.091
0.083
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.026
0.024
0.021
0.018
0.015
0.015
0.014
0.029
0.029
0.028
0.027
0.027
0.027
0.027

<1

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
253
266
282
297
305
308
310
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
20
22
24
27
28
29
29

0.27
0.22
0.37
0.5
0.65
0.7
0.76
0.14
0.19
0.23
0.19
0.32
0.31
0.25
<0.01
<0.01
0.012
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
30
26
19
16
15
14
13
0.86
0.84
0.81
0.76
0.74
0.73
0.72
<0.01
<0.01

7
7.7
8.3
9
9.4
9.5
9.7

(2.96.3)
(3.24.8)
(2.84.1)
(2.43.5)
(2.23)
(2.22.9)
(2.12.8)
(0.781.6)
(11.5)
(1.21.7)
(1.31.9)
(1.41.8)
(1.41.9)
(1.51.9)
(2.63)
(2.32.7)
(2.42.8)
(2.73.1)
(2.73.2)
(2.73.2)
(2.73.2)
(42100)
(4769)
(3957)
(3245)
(3038)
(2837)
(2735)
(0.190.23)
(0.260.34)
(0.170.22)
(0.110.15)
(0.0890.12)
(0.0820.1)
(0.0720.095)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0240.028)
(0.0220.025)
(0.020.022)
(0.0160.02)
(0.0120.019)
(0.0130.016)
(0.0130.015)
(0.0180.044)
(0.0230.035)
(0.0230.034)
(0.0220.033)
(0.0220.032)
(0.0220.032)
(0.0220.032)

(0.160.4)
(0.180.27)
(0.30.45)
(0.40.6)
(0.530.78)
(0.570.84)
(0.620.91)
(0.120.16)
(0.170.22)
(0.20.26)
(0.170.22)
(0.280.36)
(0.270.35)
(0.220.29)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.014)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(2634)
(2330)
(1721)
(1418)
(1317)
(1215)
(1114)
(0.521.3)
(0.681)
(0.660.98)
(0.620.91)
(0.640.84)
(0.630.83)
(0.620.84)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

(4.99.4)
(6.29.2)
(6.810)
(7.311)
(7.611)
(7.811)
(7.912)

RATEb

108
85
68
53
46
44
42
47
47
47
47
47
48
48
66
52
49
49
48
47
46
317
242
184
140
119
113
106
5.9
8
5
3.4
2.7
2.4
2.2
2.7
13
7.9
4.2
6.6
7.2
7.6
19
16
13
11
9
8.5
7.9
27
27
26
25
25
24
24

(70153)
(69103)
(5581)
(4464)
(4054)
(3851)
(3649)
(3265)
(3957)
(3956)
(3957)
(4253)
(4253)
(4254)
(6172)
(4856)
(4553)
(4553)
(4452)
(4351)
(4250)
(193472)
(197291)
(150221)
(118165)
(104135)
(98128)
(93121)
(5.36.6)
(79.1)
(4.35.7)
(33.9)
(2.43.1)
(2.22.7)
(1.92.5)
(<15.5)
(1115)
(<116)
(<18.4)
(5.38.1)
(6.18.4)
(7.18.2)
(1720)
(1517)
(1314)
(9.412)
(7.311)
(7.69.3)
(7.28.7)
(1741)
(2232)
(2131)
(2030)
(2030)
(2029)
(2029)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

0.023
0.057
0.081
0.094
0.098
0.1
0.1
0.046
0.28
0.3
0.2
0.29
0.26
0.27
<0.01
0.03
0.043
0.051
0.056
0.057
0.058
1.7
2.1
1.8
1.4
1.2
0.98
0.7

(<0.010.046)
(0.030.093)
(0.0460.12)
(0.0550.14)
(0.0590.15)
(0.060.15)
(0.0740.13)
(<0.010.12)
(0.160.43)
(0.160.49)
(0.150.24)
(0.240.34)
(0.210.3)
(0.220.31)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0150.051)
(0.0270.062)
(0.0330.073)
(0.0360.08)
(0.0360.084)
(0.0450.074)
(0.822.9)
(1.33.1)
(1.22.6)
(0.922)
(0.81.7)
(0.591.5)
(0.421)

<1
1.2
1.6
1.7
1.7
1.8
1.8
1.9
10
10
6
8.5
7.4
7.6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
7.8
8.9
7
5.2
4.3
3.4
2.4

(<11.1)
(<12)
(<12.5)
(12.6)
(12.6)
(12.6)
(1.32.3)
(<15)
(616)
(5.416)
(4.77.5)
(7.29.9)
(6.28.7)
(6.38.9)
(<1<1)
(<11.1)
(<11.2)
(<11.2)
(<11.3)
(<11.3)
(<11.1)
(3.813)
(5.613)
(4.510)
(3.37.4)
(2.86)
(2.15.1)
(1.53.6)

0.039
0.028
0.011
0.017

(0.0270.053)
(0.0180.039)
(<0.010.019)
(<0.010.026)

1
<1
<1
<1

(<11.4)
(<11)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.010.011)
<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

3.1 (<16.4)
2.4 (<14.5)

<0.01
0.011
0.019
<0.01

(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.018)
(<0.010.028)
(<0.010.017)

3.6
9.8
18
7.3

(<113)
(417)
(8.126)
(1.615)

<0.01
0.041
0.094
0.13
0.17
0.18
0.19
0.012
0.027
0.043
0.059
0.069
0.072
0.076

(<0.010.017)
(0.0210.068)
(0.060.14)
(0.0830.19)
(0.110.25)
(0.120.27)
(0.120.28)
(<0.010.018)
(0.0160.041)
(0.0270.062)
(0.0430.078)
(0.0530.087)
(0.0540.094)
(0.0620.091)

1.8
9.4
20
26
34
35
37
1
2.2
3.3
4.5
5.2
5.4
5.6

(<14.2)
(4.716)
(1329)
(1738)
(2248)
(2251)
(2353)
(<11.5)
(1.33.3)
(2.14.8)
(3.25.9)
(46.6)
(47)
(4.66.8)

<0.01
2.8
2.5
1.9
2.1
1.5
1.3
1.1
0.031
0.046
0.082
0.11
0.11
0.12
0.12

(<0.01<0.01)
(1.84.1)
(1.63.6)
(1.22.8)
(1.82.4)
(1.31.7)
(1.11.5)
(0.961.3)
(<0.010.068)
(0.0210.082)
(0.0510.12)
(0.0830.14)
(0.0920.14)
(0.0930.14)
(0.0940.15)

4.2
1.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
1.4
2.5
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.5

(<114)
(<11.6)
(<11.3)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<12.2)
(<12.5)
(1.53.7)
(2.54.2)
(2.84.2)
(2.84.3)
(2.84.4)

9.1 (7.910)
66
51
80
100
125
135
145
11
15
18
15
24
23
19
<1
37
64
25
23
22
21
12
9.8
6.7
5.5
4.8
4.4
4.1
28
26
24
23
22
22
21
4.5
4.3

35
35
34
34
33
33
33

(4098)
(4262)
(6596)
(81120)
(102151)
(110162)
(118173)
(9.913)
(1317)
(1520)
(1316)
(2127)
(2126)
(1621)
(<1<1)
(3242)
(5672)
(2229)
(2026)
(1925)
(1824)
(1013)
(8.611)
(5.97.6)
(4.86.2)
(4.25.4)
(3.95)
(3.64.7)
(1741)
(2131)
(2029)
(1927)
(1925)
(1925)
(1825)
(3.95)
(3.74.9)

(2548)
(2842)
(2841)
(2741)
(2740)
(2740)
(2740)

1.1 (0.851.3)
0.96 (0.771.2)
0.89 (0.711.1)

3.8 (34.7)
3.4 (2.74.1)
3.1 (2.53.7)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

NUMBER

RATEb

2 944
2 842
2 402
1 907
2 336
2 283
2 448
846
1 300
1 169
1 637
1 532
1 539
1 496
2 167
1 745
1 950
2 075
2 222
2 346
2 277
37 905
45 310
38 661
33 421
32 193
31 844
31 073
159
262
174
113
95
63
80
0
5
0
0
5
4
2
13
11
9
14
21
10
9
2
13
16
7
12
9
15

71
61
47
35
41
40
42
35
49
40
51
45
44
43
51
36
36
35
36
37
35
175
190
149
121
113
111
107
5
7
5
3
3
2
2
0
12
0
0
10
8
4
9
7
6
8
12
6
5
2
12
15
6
11
8
14

82

20

89
117
108
177
179
120
166
198
166
279
272
219
0

19
23
21
34
34
10
13
15
13
21
20
16
0

6
25 701
22 728
16 310
14 080
12 904
11 545
11 181
886
625
645
622
686
704
699
4
4

16
10
9
6
5
4
4
4
28
19
19
19
21
21
21
4
4

5 457
5 578
6 466
6 847
6 408
6 474
6 335

28
25
27
26
23
23
22

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

66
72
70
66
89
90
100
74
102
83
107
95
94
89
77
70
74
72
75
79
77
55
79
81
86
95
98
100
76
88
91
87
93
69
96
0
89
0
0
148
107
50
50
47
43
80
136
68
65
7
45
57
26
45
34
56

(47102)
(6088)
(5886)
(5581)
(77105)
(78106)
(87117)
(54108)
(85126)
(70101)
(88131)
(84108)
(83106)
(79102)
(7184)
(6575)
(6981)
(6678)
(6981)
(7286)
(7183)
(3791)
(6597)
(6899)
(73103)
(84108)
(87113)
(89115)
(6885)
(78101)
(80105)
(77100)
(82107)
(6377)
(84111)
(78102)

(120186)
(92126)
(4654)
(4754)
(4450)
(4046)
(7190)
(113169)
(6276)
(5972)
(511)
(3856)
(4871)
(2132)
(3755)
(2841)
(4769)

87 (77100)
30

24
23
17
25
24
87
87
87
87
87
87
87

75
86
87
86
87
89
85
88
103
75
80
82
93
96
97
87
87

79
73
77
76
68
68
66

(2150)
(2029)
(1929)
(1421)
(2131)
(2029)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)

(6685)
(7699)
(7799)
(7698)
(7799)
(78101)
(7597)
(77100)
(69169)
(6292)
(6698)
(68100)
(82107)
(84111)
(84113)
(77100)
(77100)

(58112)
(6089)
(6495)
(6393)
(5784)
(5783)
(5580)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Anguilla

Antigua and
Barbuda

Argentina

38

18

Aruba

Bahamas

18

Barbados

Belize

30

47

Bermuda

Bolivia
(Plurinational
State of)

168
Bonaire, Saint Eustatius and Saba
Brazil

50

84

38

British Virgin
Islands

Canada

Cayman Islands

Chile

47

14

Colombia

37

25

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
0
2

1
1
0
4
6
1
3
6
12 309
13 450
11 767
9 770
9 196
7 701
7 287

6
46
57
82
48
48
45
31
5
3
3
3
2
6
57
95
106
102
88
88
145
0
4
0

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

OTHER RELAPSE

3
6
1
1
6

1
0
0
1
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
1
0

0
0
1
0

0
0
0
2
0

0
0
0
1

5 698
4 749
4 709
4 758
4 044
3 973

4 668
4 110
3 357
2 783
2 165
2 011

3 067
1 773
1 561
1 493
937
854

0
24
217
159

104
143
138
338
290

1 724
666
1 254
489
426

1 828
809
1 392
827
716

1
0
0
1

1
0
2
2
4
1

0
2
2
1
1

1
0
4
4
5
2

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

38
56
30
31
26
19

11
23
8
10
10
3

8
4
7
5
5
7

3
3

1
2
6

2
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

36
44
59
83
82
97

34
55
29

1
1
3

0
47

0
0

2
0

2
0

1
11 166
14 422
10 127
9 748
9 070
8 847
8 345
0
74 570
91 013
77 899
80 209
73 395
75 040
74 395

7 010
6 458
6 278
6 048
5 937
5 613
0

1 408
1 565
1 250
893
699
630
0

1 133
1 288
1 673
1 693
1 742
1 694
0

0
0

45 650
41 186
42 093
37 697
39 267
37 932

29 291
23 622
23 990
22 665
22 144
23 030

13 814
10 457
11 037
10 122
10 275
10 017

1
0

1
0

1
1 968
1 921
1 667
1 484
1 452
1 505
1 322
2
2
5

1
549
436
492
433
488
462
358
0
5

4
6 151
4 150
3 021
2 505
2 427
2 398
2 376
12 447
9 912
11 630
10 360
11 344
11 324
11 420

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

4
6
11
5
6
1

6
0

4
6
15
5
12
1

0
4

806

49

0
1
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

63
451
547
436
469
408

1 630
225
154
263
257

63
2 081
772
590
732
665

18
18

10
14
18

2 634
3 089
2 901
3 340
3 398

8 700
6 548
8 263
6 478
7 551

11 334
9 637
11 164
9 818
10 949

466
0
3 641
0

0
516
656
528
446
466
519
472

0
723
634
482
562
416
466
444

0
0
0
20
4
0
0
0

0
180
195
145
39
82
58
48

64
40
36
24

0
180
195
145
103
122
94
72

0
29
44
56
68
109
58
39

2
0

1
0

0
0

0
0

1 561
1 290
1 186
1 114
1 152
1 154

1 284
879
502
525
509
502

1 017
694
631
636
549
553

0
0

225
158
186
152
188
167

128
67
118
96

225
158
314
219
306
263

0
0

7 530
8 358
6 870
7 196
7 319
7 028

1 380
1 446
1 429
1 709
1 611
1 696

1 002
1 487
1 618
2 026
2 117
1 985

0
0
311

339
443
413
277
400

0
339
469

339
443
413
616
869

0
0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

75
100
100
50
100

55
54
58
63
65
66

67

78
71
79
76
72
86

100

33
100
100

51
44
67

100
67

50

100

83
80
83
87
89
90

61
64
64
62
64
62

100
52
40
48
49
51
47
43

0
100

50

55
59
70
68
69
70

85
85
83
81
82
81

Region of the Americas

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

153

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV
NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

YEAR

Costa Rica

11

Cuba

Curaao
Dominica

12

Dominican
Republic

36

40

Ecuador

80

33

El Salvador

44

27

Grenada

Guatemala

43

23

Guyana

23

94

Haiti

142

Honduras

75

38

Jamaica

Mexico

17

17

Montserrat

Netherlands
Antilles

154

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
230
586
585
534
501
443
490
546
1 553
1 183
770
817
712
827
5
6
8

13
4
8
2 597
4 053
5 291
5 003
4 280
4 256
3 964
8 243
7 893
6 908
4 416
4 845
4 703
4 832
2 367
2 422
1 485
1 794
1 718
1 686
1 700
0
4
0

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

245
349
330
287
271
267

71
184
81
14
66
89

31
98
104
107
89
108

834
675
467
498
418
462
5

520
257
160
167
150
212
0

199
201
103
106
91
98
0

OTHER RELAPSE

79
1

7
10
0

0
35
19
14
17
25
54
50
40
46
46
45

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

26
10
14
7

0
35
45
24
31
32

122
9
14
5
11

54
172
49
60
51
56

3
4
8

9
0
0

0
0
0

2 787
2 907
2 949
2 458
2 441
2 159

1 418
1 234
1 032
933
822
803

244
540
602
580
615
578

5 890
5 064
3 048
3 380
3 317
3 373

2 237
1 338
635
435
369
404

420
400
330
609
584
655

1 008
1 059
985
930
972

2 241
278
402
362
363
338

181
108
255
313
329
328

2
0

5
4
4

0
1
0

0
0
0

2 368
2 052
2 420
2 070
1 609
2 121

546
518
588
326
170
265

85
119
240
320
328
325

2
0
0

0
0
0

1
0
0

3
1
0

4
1
0

0
0
0

0
112
100

204
610
420
309
266
324

309
188
186
196

204
610
729
497
452
520

0
0
0

106
403
421
433
400

280
392
357
323
263

386
795
778
756
663

0
1
0

91
78
58
63
62

180
36
28
50
30

271
114
86
113
92

0
0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

1
0
0

1
0
0

0
0
0

205
202
256
346
207
348

372
828
436

249
141
101
132
88
152

58
70
40
29

249
141
159
202
128
181

438
0
0
0

187
231
352
242
301
274

22
34
33
61
78
75

6
0
0
0

2
38
8
30
56
38

46
17
87
149
124

2
84
25
117
205
162

0
0
0
0

5 887
7 340
8 171

2 930
5 292
4 655

1 367
1 484
1 463

236
195
313

110
33
60

346
228
373

8 242

4 335

1 307

338

43

381

2 306
3 404
2 069
1 897
1 881
1 842

2 214
2 396
721
451
520
482

232
370
362
330
331
382

0
0
0

100
236
181
151
192
170

33
33
25

100
236
181
184
225
195

0
0
0

93
90
53
78
77
76

14
20
31
22
48
46

2
4
6
2
5
6

0
0
0
0

2
13
0
3
9
2

5
0
11
17

2
13
5
3
20
19

0
0
0
0

9 220
11 676
11 997
11 903
11 862
12 572

1 807
1 675
421
1 062
958
2 812

302
2 081
2 657
3 175
3 193
3 464

2 831
1 896
2 114
0

421
618
774
719
722

914
1 408
596
816
544

1 335
2 026
1 370
1 535
1 266

0
111
585

0
1

0
1

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

5
5
4
3 813
3 119
2 913
3 365
3 246
2 902
3 322
168
296
422
639
653
763
712
6 212
10 420
14 311
14 602
14 222
3 647
4 984
6 406
3 333
2 829
2 924
2 876
123
109
127
90
105
139
130
14 437
11 329
18 434
18 524
18 810
18 846
19 570
1

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

78
65
80
95
80
75

62
72
74
75
74
69
100

25
100
100

66
70
74
72
75
73

72
79
83
89
90
89

78
72
73
72
74

100
80
100

81
80
80
86
90
89

31
34
41
57
52
54

67
58
64

66

51
59
74
81
78
79

87
82
63
78
62
62

84
87
97
92
93
82

100

40

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Nicaragua

71

42

Panama

35

43

Paraguay

51

35

Peru

175

107

Puerto Rico

Saint Kitts and


Nevis

Saint Lucia

Saint Vincent and


the Grenadines

2
Sint Maarten (Dutch part)
Suriname

20

14

34

Trinidad and
Tobago

10

16

16

Turks and Caicos


Islands

United States
of America

10

Uruguay

28

21

US Virgin Islands

Venezuela
(Bolivarian
Republic of)

28

22

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
2 944
2 842
2 402
1 907
2 336
2 283
2 448
846
1 300
1 169
1 637
1 532
1 539
1 496
2 167
1 745
1 950
2 075
2 222
2 346
2 277
37 905
45 310
38 661
33 421
32 193
31 844
31 073
159
262
174
113
95
63
80
0
5
0
0
5
4
2
13
11
9
14
21
10
9
2
13
16
7
12
9
15
3
82
89
117
108
177
179
120
166
198
166
279
272
219
0

6
25 701
22 728
16 310
14 080
12 904
11 545
11 181
886
625
645
622
686
704
699
4
4

5 457
5 578
6 466
6 847
6 408
6 474
6 335

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

OTHER RELAPSE

1 568
1 471
1 253
1 394
1 329
1 440

854
541
395
530
541
575

253
231
160
245
261
274

1 066
460
860
829
755
707
993
748
900
1 260
1 345
1 498
1 318

114
589
505
402
452
425

28
74
216
251
287
287

870
791
665
554
428
499

127
170
150
240
283
269

7
41
86

32 096
22 580
18 490
17 989
17 391
17 264

7 803
6 018
5 592
5 176
5 203
5 201

5 411
5 682
5 335
5 137
5 380
5 185

128
81
60
52
30
37

111
69
37
30
25
35

4
0
0
5
4
2

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

167
159
99
167
152
159

169
0
130
127

167
159
268
167
282
286

108
41
56
50
45
77

93
191
141
190
134

108
134
247
191
235
211

76
96
105

516
273
78
81
109

28
530
273
154
177
214

809
831
871
647

4 381
3 195
3 060
2 999
2 776

1 794
1 474
1 325
1 404

4 381
4 989
4 534
4 324
4 180

326
0
0

23
24
16
13
8
4

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
4

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
4

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
2
0
0
0

0
2
0
0
0

0
0
0

11
7
11
18
7
9

1
1
1
0
0

0
0
1
1
0

0
0
0
0

1
2
1
2
0

2
0
0
1
0

3
2
1
3
0

0
0
0

5
9
6
11
3
8
3

7
4
1
0
6
7
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

4
3
0
1
0
0
0

0
0
3
2
2
0

4
3
0
4
2
2
0

37
49
68
149

40
54
24
14

12
6
13
9

2
1
0

0
6
2
5

1
2
5
10

1
8
7
15

0
0
1

7
115
95
169
154
136

68
61
50
97
91
58

12
17
12
9
19
20

0
0
0
0

22
5
9
4
8
5

26
13
43
52
39

22
31
22
47
60
44

0
0
0

4
25
0

20
39
19
56
37
41

103
197
167
194

272
377
350
432
428
442

0
0
116

0
0
0

5
0
0
0

28
14

8 093
5 883
5 111
4 742
4 014
3 695

10 795
7 204
6 030
5 515
4 990
4 990

3 835
3 211
2 939
2 638
2 383
2 134

5
12
0
9
158
362

349
348
355
424
409
368

178
165
147
159
192
218

78
77
73
72
66
72

32
0
0
0

20
39
15
31
37
41

3 056
3 525
3 653
3 344
3 436
3 252

1 517
1 616
1 853
1 599
1 665
1 758

709
948
1 094
1 116
1 112
1 077

114
0
0

272
377
247
235
261
248

0
0
0
0

52
0

70
0
75

0
0
0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

65
73
76
72
71
71

90
44
63
67
63
62

46
53
65
71
78
73

80
79
77
78
77
77

54
54
62
63
55
51

100
100
100

88
92
95
100
100

42
69
86
100
33
53
100

48
48
74
91

9
65
66
64
63
70

75

43
45
46
46
45
43

66
68
71
73
68
63

50

67
69
66
68
67
65

Region of the Americas

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

155

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Anguilla

Antigua and
Barbuda

67

12

46

Argentina

Aruba

Bahamas

81

Barbados

100

Belize

52

Bermuda

Bolivia
(Plurinational
State of)

62
Bonaire, Saint Eustatius and Saba
Brazil

17

86

72

British Virgin
Islands

100

Canada

75

Cayman Islands

50

Chile

79

72

Colombia

77

Costa Rica

54

90

90

Cuba

Curaao

156

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

0
0
3
6
2
1
1
5 698
4 749
4 709
4 985
4 758
4 044

4
6
2
1
3
5 707
5 177
4 709
5 036
2 577
5 062

6
38
56
30
32
31
26
3
3

30
32
31
26

11
8
3
2
29
45
59
63
82

8
1
2
36
44
59
54
83
82
2
0

7 010
6 458
6 278
5 686
6 048
5 937
45 650
41 186
42 093
38 444
37 697
39 267

1
7 010
6 212
6 278
5 686
6 048
5 897
0
45 650
34 007
42 093
38 133
40 714
40 818

1
0
0

1
436
492
433
463
488
462
0
5

492
459
813
919
850
5
1

1 561
1 290
1 186
1 166
1 114
1 152
7 530
8 358
6 870
7 188
7 196
7 319
245
349
330
322
287
271
834
675
467
432
498
418

2
1 111
1 360
1 147
1 143
1 259
1 365
1 634
7 778
7 027
7 288
6 899
349
306
296
280
166
834
673
466
430
496
415
5

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

133
100
100
100
300
100
109
100
101
54
125

100
100
100
100

100
300
100
81
102
100
117
99

100
96
100
100
100
99

100
83
100
99
108
104

100

100
106
176
188
184

100

71
105
97
98
113
118

20
113
98
101
94

100
93
92
98
61
100
100
100
100
100
99

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

100
50
0
100
67
5
26
19
26
24
19

0
33
0
0
33
1
5
5
5
4
4

50
0
0
7
20
34
36
19
26

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

50
0
0
3
6
5
11
5
7

0
17
0
0
0
84
43
37
21
47
43

17
6
32
12

40
56
42
69

17
13
6
8

7
0
3
0

20
25
10
12

0
0
6
0

45
100
100
100
52
78
56
44
83

45
0
0
0
0
0
19
2
0

9
0
0
0
10
9
12
6
17

0
0
0
3
0
2
3
0

0
0
0
28
2
12
13
0

0
0
0
0
7
11
0
32
0

0
53
73
76
82
82
84

17
49
31
33
33
31

0
9
6
2
2
2
1

0
22
44
39
38
41

0
4
4
3
4
4
4

1
4
5
5
5
5

0
1
1
1
1
1
1

1
0
1
1
1
1

0
9
9
5
5
5
5

3
9
9
10
9
10

100
24
7
12
5
7
4

79
16
9
12
14
11

100

100

22
8
5
12
10

13
59
59
65
65

5
9
10
9
7

0
0
0
0

1
1
2
1
0

59
22
24
13
17

0
0

40
0

0
0

0
0

0
100

60
0

50
79
82
83
78
72
61

11

0
7
9
9
9
9
9

0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
8
6
6
6
7
7

50
5
3
2
0
12
12

70
63
66
67
68

10
9
11
9
9

5
6
7
6
6

1
1
1
2
2

8
7
9
8
9

6
14
6
8
6

43
85
83
86
49
90
91
90
89
88
87

14
4
5
3
4
0
2
2
3
0
3

10
5
3
5
5
4
4
6
6
8
7

1
2
2
1
1
3
1
1
0
1
2

12
3
4
2
1
2
1
1
1
2
1

19
1
3
3
39
2
1
1
1
0
0

0
7

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Dominica

100

Dominican
Republic

64

85

Ecuador

39

75

El Salvador

89

Grenada

50

Guatemala

61

83

44

70

Guyana

Haiti

70

79

Honduras

64

86

67

70

75

86

Jamaica

Mexico

Montserrat

Netherlands
Antilles

Nicaragua

80

85

69

80

51

80

83

81

Panama

Paraguay

Peru

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

3
3
4
2 787
2 907
2 949
2 373
2 458
2 441
5 890
5 064
3 048
3 448
3 380
3 317

3
3
4
2 007
2 760
2 697
2 373
2 458
2 441
5 236

1 008
1 059
942
985
930
2
0

1 008
1 059
942
985
930

3
5
4
2 368
2 052
2 420
2 348
2 070
1 609
85
119
240
233
320
328
5 887
7 340
7 915
8 171
2 306
3 404
2 069
1 974
1 897
1 881
93
90
53
78
78
77
9 220
11 676
11 997
11 531
11 903
11 862

2 150
3 448
3 380
3 330

6
3
6
4
2 368
1 908
1 920
2 070
2 121
296
119
257
309
340
328
3 081
5 887
7 340
7 915
8 435
2 226
2 362
1 905
1 830
1 888
1 881
93
99
53
78
78
76
9 220
11 538
12 172
11 432
11 840
11 821

0
1
1
0
2

1 568
1 471
1 253
1 453
1 394
1 329
1 066
460
860
833
829
755
748
900
1 260
1 276
1 345
1 498
32 096
22 580
18 490
17 796
17 989
17 391

1 536
1 437
1 496
1 708
1 481
1 552
1 388
460
873
858
883
768
748
900
1 452
1 279
1 350
1 467
28 185
22 230
14 793
14 056
14 805
14 212

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100
100
100
72
95
91
100
100
100
89

71
100
100
100

100
100
100
100
100

100
120
100
100
93

82
100
132
348
100
107
133
106
100

100
100
100

97
69
92
93
100
100
100
110
100
100
100
99
100
99
101
99
99
100

250

98
98
119
118
106
117
130
100
102
103
107
102
100
100
115
100
100
98
88
98
80
79
82
82

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

67
100
100
43
37
80
72
71
79

0
0
0
21
34
5
5
4
6
39

0
0
0
5
5
4
3
3
4
2

0
0
0
2
2
2
1
1
2
8

33
0
0
13
19
7
8
8
7
14

0
0
0
16
4
3
10
12
2
37

81
72
74
71

3
3
4
4

3
3
4
4

3
3
4
3

6
6
8
8

5
12
7
11

78
91
90
91
88

1
0
1
1
1

7
4
6
5
5

1
1
1
1
4

5
2
3
3
2

8
1
0
0
0

1
1

4
7

0
0
0
0
31
1

2
1
1
1
5

2
2
1
6
3
9
6
8
2
3
10
6
5
7
25
3
3
4
3
2
5
20
4
21
15
5
6
8
11
3
3
2

67

33
100

33
50
56
75

5
11

67
50
3
5

57
72
71

7
4
6
34
13
57
61
55
57
70
14
8
11

5
5
6
11
12
7
7
5
8
4
5
6
5

2
2
1
1
1
1
1

8
9
9
38
24
26
14
16
19
21
13
7
7

67
39
81
81
80
80
79
2
5
4
14
13
55
69
64
71
78
81
82

12
25
5
7
5
6
6
65
40
53
42
51
14
6
12
6
5
4
4

5
7
6
5
6
5
6
10
23
13
15
10
14
4
6
5
6
6
6

1
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
1
1
1
1

8
4
5
4
5
6
6
17
11
26
8
10
11
12
9
6
6
5
5

78
79
77
10
43
2
10
14
13

20

66
70
73
72
73
69
10
27
68
61
67
65
8
21
46
64
68
75
75
90
91
87
78
70

14
13
13
14
16
16
60
33
12
18
13
16
43
45
33
19
12
5
9
0
5
4
11

4
5
5
3
3
4
14
7
8
6
7
7
3
5
5
5
5
7
3
2
2
2
3
3

Region of the Americas

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

80

2
1
2
1
1
1
1
2
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
2
2
2
1
1

10
9
6
6
7
7
13
22
10
14
13
12
17
22
8
7
6
5
6
3
4
4
6
6

4
2
3
3
0
3
3
10
1
1
0
0
29
7
7
5
8
7
6
4
1
1
8
9

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

157

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Puerto Rico

68

81

60

80

Saint Kitts and


Nevis

Saint Lucia

57

Saint Vincent and


the Grenadines

Sint Maarten (Dutch part)


Suriname

14

Trinidad and
Tobago

69

69

Turks and Caicos


Islands

United States
of America

76

60

Uruguay

68

80

50

US Virgin Islands

Venezuela
(Bolivarian
Republic of)

74

158

84

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

128
81
60
56
52
30
4
0
0
4
5
4
11
7
11
18
18
7
5
9
6
4
11
3

SIZE OF
COHORT

128
81
60
56
43
37
5

4
5
5
8
13
19
18
7
13

4
1
51
37

37
49
68
149
7
115
95
130
169
154

71
78
194
106
144
169
154
2
3

8 093
5 883
5 111
4 864
4 742
4 014
349
348
355
380
424
409
2

8 116
5 901
5 136
4 881
3 709
7 460
370
344
345
373
422
406
2

3 056
3 525
3 653
3 392
3 344
3 436

3 056
3 390
3 581
3 336
3 301
3 433

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100
100
100
100
83
123
125

100
100
125

114
118
106
100
100

144

36
33

100

104

1 114
169
112
111
100
100

100
100
100
100
78
186
106
99
97
98
100
99
100

100
96
98
98
99
100

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

68
64
0
0
63
0
40

23
31
22
9
33
16
20

0
0
0
0
0

8
5
3
2
5
0
20

2
0
0
4
0
3
0

25
80
0

50
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

25
20
20

88
15
11
28

13
54
74
67
57

0
31
11
6
29

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
5
0
14

0
0
0
0
0

100

100
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
100

10
49

4
19

12
16

8
14

67
3

75
86
0
81
20

0
80

38

21

13

24

49
22
68
61
65
61

21
46
4
4
2
8

19
11
12
15
15
14

1
2
2
4
1

10
6
16
18
14
14

0
13
0
0
0
1

0
33

0
33

0
0

0
0

100
0

0
33

76
83
84
85
85
60
27
0
4
2
7
7

15
11
8
8
9
6
10
13
11
11
9
12
0

4
3

6
0

4
4
5
5
4
4

41
85
80
82
77
73
50

68
76
83
82
83
84

0
0
0

1
1
0
0
1
0
0

2
1
4
1
4
6
5
6
0

6
3
6
5
5
32
17
0
1
0
2
2
50

1
0
0
0
0
0

8
13
10
11
11
11

13
6
2
2
1
1

2
3

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Anguilla

Antigua and
Barbuda

100

Argentina

30

Aruba

Bahamas

80

Barbados

Belize

23

Bermuda

Bolivia
(Plurinational
State of)

66
Bonaire, Saint Eustatius and Saba
Brazil

78

42

British Virgin
Islands

Canada

64

Cayman Islands

Chile

24

Colombia

Costa Rica

Cuba

82
Curaao

74

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

0
0
0
0
0
0
2

0
1

1 828
809
618
1 392
827

1 615
1 083
374
893

1
0
4
3
4
5

4
1
3
5

0
0
0
0
4
6
15
7
5
12

0
0
0
13
14
0

63
2 081
772
652
590
732

0
462
804
772
652
590
598
0

11 334
9 637
8 634
11 164
9 818

7 859
9 479
9 519
9 494
10 664

0
0
0
195
145
103
109
122
94
0
0

145
106
110
126
95

0
2
0
225
158
314
226
219
306
339
443
423
413
616
0
35
45
42
24
31
54
172
49
59
60
51

150
140
212
231
219

69
49
34
32
2
55
58
48
58
56
61

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

50

200
175
27
108

100
33
75
100

325

93

733
39
100
100
100
82

69
98
110
85
109

100
103
101
103
101

95
45
94
105
72

197
109
81
133
6
102
34
98
98
93
120

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

100

7
14
10
10

26
29
16
20

5
6
6
4

0
1
1
1

9
16
9
13

53
34
59
52

25
0
0
20

50
100
33
60

0
0
33
20

0
0
0
0

25
0
0
0

0
0
33
0

23

23

38

57

29

14

57
49
63
73
72
73

9
11
3
3
4
5

7
12
5
4
8
7

5
2
3
2
2
2

15
8
7
10
7
7

7
16
19
9
7
7

30
26
18
18
15

10
22
33
32
28

4
7
8
8
8

0
2
1
2
2

14
19
23
25
23

41
25
17
15
24

16
8
4
7
4

16
59
59
71
60

6
7
6
10
7

1
0
2
0
0

2
3
3
0
1

60
23
26
11
27

32
69
29
22
15

26
3

8
14
3
8
7

1
1
0
1
2

18
9
9
10
7

15
3
58
59
60

23
55
59
56
0
82
78
67
83
64
69

9
12
9
28
0
0
7

10
4
9
3
50
7
10
6
14
18
15

3
2
3

25
24
21
6
0
5
2
2
3
2
7

30
2
0
6
50
0
0
21
0
0
0

16
5

0
5
3
4
0
5

Region of the Americas

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

159

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Dominica

Dominican
Republic

53

Ecuador

55

El Salvador

88

Grenada

Guatemala

73

64

Guyana

51

Haiti

69

Honduras

57

Jamaica

67

74

Mexico

61

Montserrat

Netherlands
Antilles

Nicaragua

78

76

Panama

48

Paraguay

56

Peru

160

70

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

0
4
1
204
610
729
565
497
452

1
0
0
498
530
565
497
434

386
795
831
778
756

554
831
778
756

271
114
86
86
113

181
114
86
86
113

0
0
1
0
249
141
159
197
202
128
2
84
25
78
117
205
346
228
374
373

0
0
254
164
199
202
181
38
23
95
146
205
55
228
367
381

100
236
181
189
184
225
2
13
5
2
3
20
1 335
2 026
1 656
1 370
1 535

180
169
189
145
192
6
5
0
3
19
138
1 456
1 806
1 829
1 229

0
0
0
0
0

167
159
268
296
167
282
108
134
247
228
191
235
28
530
273
163
154
177

289
230
181
228
150
178

4 381
4 989
5 141
4 534
4 324

4 521
2 299
2 201

42
237
233
238
203
144
164
160
164
188

2 163

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

0
0

82
73
100
100
96

70
100
100
100

67
100
100
100
100

102
116

101
100
141

45
92
122
125
100

16
100
98

76
93
100
79
85
300

100
0
100
95

10
72
109
134
80

173
145
68
77
90
63

31
96
102
125
86

27
60
98
106
106

103
46
43

50

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

100

29
56
34
0
47

26
5
4
0
6

3
7
4
0
13

4
8
5
0
5

27
19
16
0
29

11
6
37
100
0

56
39
61
46

8
8
8
9

5
5
7
6

10
7
8
8

12
10
15
16

9
31
0
16

63
68
81
84
85

3
0
1
0
3

9
6
3
8
3

3
4
0
0
1

18
13
14
5
8

3
8
0
3
1

59
63

15
16

4
4

2
4

4
10

17
2

65
55
55

8
10
8

5
8
5

7
6
7

11
16
20

5
5
4

24
22
3
4
0

29
35
51
22
51

13
9
12
10
14

5
9
4
2
0

26
13
26
24
18

3
13
4
38
17

42
63
59

15
7
10

5
3
10

7
0
3

22
13
10

9
14
8

49

20

10

11

44
59
0
65
50
0

10
9
100
6
7
67

8
6
0
10
10
17

2
2
0
3
1
0

6
17
0
14
10
17

29
7
0
3
22
0

0
16

20

67
58

0
5

0
0

80

33
21

0
0

33
48
58
55
56

4
7
8
7
5

8
7
5
11
9

7
4
9
4
6

12
14
13
11
10

36
20
7
11
14

69
65
71
72
97
70

10
10
12
6
0
6

4
6
7
5
0
3

3
2
2
3
0
6

11
15
7
9
3
11

3
2
2
5
0
3

19
23
19
16
18

24
35
30
30
30

2
9
11
9
10

0
4
2
2
0

48
22
36
42
37

7
7
2
1
4

19
44
49
46
47

40
26
21
14
9

6
4
4
9
9

1
1
1
4

25
10
14
10
11

9
16
11
21
20

78
78
74

0
7

4
5
3

7
5
3

6
11
11

4
1
1

49

21

12

12

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Puerto Rico

Saint Kitts and


Nevis

Saint Lucia

33

Saint Vincent and


the Grenadines

Sint Maarten (Dutch part)


Suriname

Trinidad and
Tobago

68

Turks and Caicos


Islands

United States
of America

Uruguay

76

56

US Virgin Islands

Venezuela
(Bolivarian
Republic of)

80

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

0
0
0
0

113
0
0
0

0
2
0
0
0

2
0
0
0

3
2
1
1
3
4
3
0
6
4
2

1
1
1
3
3

4
1

1
8
7
15
22
31
22
52
47
60

22
21
51
47
60

20
39
19
47
56
37

30
45
57
41

25

272
377
350
351
432
428

247
248
227
261

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100

33

100
100
100

100

100
50

43

71
95
98
100
100

125

158
96
102
111

71
71
53
61

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

73

23

50

50

100

100
0

0
0
33

0
0
67

0
100
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

100

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

100
100

0
0

33

33

33

23
19
27
32
48

45
38
2
4
20

14
29
37
11
15

9
0
6
0

9
14
31
47
17

0
0
2
0
0

33

33

33

56

20

16

57
69
60
46

17
4
12
10

13
20
14
34

3
0
0
0

7
4
14
7

3
2
0
2

80
79
84
80

0
0
0

4
6
5
4

2
2
1
2

12
12
10
13

2
1
0
2

Region of the Americas

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

161

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

YEAR

Anguilla

Antigua and
Barbuda
100

86

13

Argentina

Aruba

Bahamas

100

100

Barbados

Belize

100

99

Bermuda

100

Bolivia
(Plurinational
State of)
0
Bonaire, Saint Eustatius and Saba
Brazil

59

23

45

British Virgin
Islands

Canada

26

28

Cayman Islands

100

Chile

Colombia

53

43

67

Costa Rica

Cuba

93

103

Curaao
Dominica

38

Dominican
Republic
1

60

66

84

96

Ecuador

El Salvador

Grenada

100

Guatemala

16

63

70

88

35

67

Guyana

Haiti

162

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS

0
100
100
100
86

7
13
13

88
100
100

100
100
100
100
100
95
99

100
0
5
17
23

59
51
52
45

0
26
36
40
28

100

53
40
43
43
67
96
104

93
84
99
103
0

19
80
38
1
45
57
60
0
18
47
66
84
95
95
96

33
100
100
16
56
65
63
70
70
79
88
35
65

67

0
6
1
4
6
715
1 093
1 008

45
46
32
8
3
2
6
106
88
89
143
1

1
0
485
1 509
2 003
0
51 552
41 796
44 038
37 210
0
1
0
414
574
645
382
1
2
4

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)

1
6
1
4
7
11 242
10 450
8 190
7 762

6
50
51
46
32

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE

0
3
0
0
5
375
530
566

17
15
15
2
2

3
2
6
106
88
94
145

2
25
18
17
29

1
9 973
9 224
9 128
8 620
0
87 223
81 658
85 159
81 946
0

0
0
19
38
140
0
8 249
8 331
8 828
8 558
0

1
1 616
1 601
1 599
1 385

1
0
63
94
64
23

729
698
710
862
0

4
2 633
2 494
2 516
2 472
10 360
11 344
11 663
11 889
560
511
457
499
781
831
717
838
5

3
4
3
78
2 011
2 516
2 489
10
959
2 385
3 379
1 544
1 655
1 650
1 667

16
5
8
5 312
4 468
4 442
4 160
4 808
5 202
5 026
5 095
1 830
1 746
1 736
1 730

2
1
1
3
399
403
547
3
402
443
427
188
194
204
180

2
5
4
600
1 871
1 920
2 103
456
516
717
734
5 062
9 476
9 886
9 518

6
5
4
3 861
3 316
2 942
3 351
656
740
912
836
14 344
14 662

2
1
1
478
326
260
325
80
123
195
209
1 797
2 068
2 236
1 892

5 537
4 540
5 031
5 079
374
491
476

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

14 265

353
956
1 133
1 231
50
44
41

71
46
53
0

50
0
0
83

52
48
56

38
33
47
25
67

33
24
20
19
20

4
3
7

16
20
20
23

100

15
16
10
6

6
21
23
24
13
9
9

10
6
6

67
25
33
4
20
16
22
30
42
19
13
12
12
12
11

100
20
25
80
17
14
15
18
24
27
28
35
22
23
20

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

100

20

84

59
40
27

100

68
100
100
100

84
21
0

100

0
0

100
0
100

8
0

20
53
28
82

100
100
0

100
100
100

97
82
77

9
5
13

100

100

84

65
67
67

100

100
68
100
100
100

16
76
81

85
91
88
93

100

21
35
84

17
80
66

50
100
100

100
100
100
38
47
35
63

100
100
0
243
100
100
100

59
55
59

10
8
10

0
0
0

0
0
409

50

674

27

1 561
1 366

0
2
953
443
822
5 041
3

97
455
0
0
0
20
250

132
162
144
7 250
4 112

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

YEAR

Honduras

44

54

83

87

43

Jamaica

Mexico

Montserrat

100

Netherlands
Antilles
Nicaragua

27

56

86

82

32

Panama

Paraguay

Peru

29

82

95

Puerto Rico

Saint Kitts and


Nevis

100

100

Saint Lucia

Saint Vincent and


the Grenadines
100
Sint Maarten (Dutch part)
Suriname

73

59

Trinidad and
Tobago
69

98

71

59

64

92

89

Turks and Caicos


Islands

United States
of America

Uruguay

US Virgin Islands

Venezuela
(Bolivarian
Republic of)
39

78

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS
44
56
55
54
83
82
64
87
7
35
30
43
100

27
45
45
56
86
89
79
82

4
11
32
2
32
35
29
82
96
97
95

100
100
7
86
100
100
100
100
64
59
100
73
89
82

69
100
94
98

71
59
63
62
64
92
96
94
89

39
64
73
78

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE

1 455
1 595
1 619
1 557
79
86
96
128
1 382
6 878
5 879
8 842
1

3 333
2 862
2 957
2 901
95
105
150
147
19 932
19 406
19 773
20 699
1

200
205
192
201
28
16
29
29
217
581
945
1 189
0

0
2

0
2

556
1 062
1 081
1 445
1 569
1 540
1 364
1 337

2 076
2 336
2 413
2 575
1 828
1 725
1 729
1 630
2 348
2 370
2 427
2 461
35 541
33 667
33 169
32 477
113
95
63
80
2
5
4
2
14
21
11
9
7
15
11
17
3
119
113
188

30
28
32
60
200
275
213
213

103
271
777
668
10 636
11 710
9 539
93
91
61
76

4
2
1
18
11
9
7
15
7
10
3
87
101
154
124
322
306
254
5

179
322
324
258

88
140
138
668
775
678
853
28
23
9
14

0
0
0
4
4
0
1
6
5
3
0
20
28
49
42
73
95
58
1

3
5
8 273
8 177
7 197
7 107
574
686
662
620

7
14 080
12 904
11 545
11 181
626
711
704
699

1
1
1 035
826
711
612
74
100
102
103

2 678
4 248
4 856
5 213

6 950
6 605
6 641
6 645

392
482
487
479

14
13
12
13
35
19
30
23
16
8
16
13
0

100

5
3
3
4
13
18
16
16

85
52
18
100
7
6
9
30
25
15
18

0
0
0
22
36
0
14
40
71
30
0
23
28
32

34
23
31
23
20

33
20
13
10
10
9
13
15
15
17

15
11
10
9

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

100
90
43
63

100
100
100

100
94
67

42
64

0
0
0

17
33
43

0
0

7
12

29
14
14
19

0
0
0
0

0
0

100
89
90
54
100
100
100

38
23
36

100
94
67
10
13
28
66

66
51
70

17
18
10

9
56
50

25
25

0
33
20
100

10
32
51

36
49
6
12

100

19
19
31

39
17
21
33

0
153
96
27
0

1 490
676

60
465
400
16
196

0
0
1 214
2 137
1 361
1 183

0
0

0
6
4
11

Region of the Americas

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

76
102

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

163

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

YEAR
Anguilla

Antigua and
Barbuda

Argentina

Aruba

Bahamas

Barbados

Belize

Bermuda

Bolivia
(Plurinational
State of)

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

Bonaire, Saint
2010
Eustatius and Saba
Brazil

British Virgin
Islands

Canada

Cayman Islands

Chile

Colombia

Costa Rica

Cuba

Curaao
Dominica

Dominican
Republic

Ecuador

El Salvador

Grenada

Guatemala

Guyana

164

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED

0
0
276
142
89
109

1
6
1
2
6
9 627
9 058
7 363
6 997

1
0
0

6
46
46
41
30

0
0
0
1
1
0

3
2
6
91
83
82
144

0
63
34
60
106

1
9 201
8 634
8 378
7 937

0
0
25

96
93
70

0
0
0

100

373
339
449
573

77 120
70 494
71 700
70 997
0

0
22
14
18
15

1
1 445
1 370
1 447
1 274

0
1 130
1 098
1 321
987

0
6
7
23
10

4
2 319
2 275
2 210
2 209
9 917
10 931
11 047
11 020
515
487
426
465
730
771
666
782
5

1
49
1
56
65

91
110
131
3
0
3
1
10
3
7
0

0
12
0
108
253
155
156
176
14
6
2
2

0
40
27
230
18
0
0
5

12
4
8
4 583
3 971
3 990
3 640
4 013
4 424
4 270
4 432
1 716
1 660
1 623
1 638
5
5
4
3 264
3 114
2 814
3 170
631
623
707
674

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

0
0
2 369

44
38
21

0
0
0
1

22

696
455
1 240
2
0
203
169
202
172
174
5

0
32
117
183
363
12
11
65
0

20
73
134

34
0
0

0
78
80
91
77

25
2
0
3
3

6
4
11
0
0

44
23
26
26
22
100

13

0
1
3
4

8
1
1
4
0

1
2
5

5
0
0

0
0
66
12

0
0
0

0
0
0
1
1

NOTIFIED

0
0
0
2
0
809
1 392
827
716

4
4
5
2
0
0
0
15
5
12
1

0
772
590
732
665

35
397
21

9 637
11 164
9 818
10 949
0

0
8
9
13
15

0
103
122
94
72

0
0
1
3
2

0
314
219
306
263
443
413
616
869
45
24
31
32
49
60
51
56

23
6
48
2
0
3
0
1
1
2
0

0
25
12
15
10
28
7
0
1
0

20
10
48

0
0
0

4
1
0
729
497
452
520
795
778
756
663
114
86
113
92
1
0
0
159
202
128
181
25
117
205
162

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

1
0
1 290

3
4
2

0
0
3
0

0
251
670
664

50

159

75
80
100

20

43
92
100

0
0
210
54

1
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
34
60
106

5 917

61

75

71

72
91
72
105

133
79
57
2
117

39
55
37
55

0
20
63
70

88
12
95
75
2

25
18
142
10

373
37
52
552

643

0
91
51

0
226
199
221
276
551
487
495
1
28

19
33
19
31

0
106
502
548
584
14
82
85
2

40
37
182
18
11
0

0
4
2
0

0
6
6
20
8
68
102
78
1
0

1
9
2
5

0
83
241
138
133
148
7
6
1
2

20
17
182
18
0
0

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

Haiti

Honduras

Jamaica

Mexico

Montserrat

Netherlands
Antilles
Nicaragua

Panama

Paraguay

Peru

Puerto Rico

Saint Kitts and


Nevis

Saint Lucia

Saint Vincent and


the Grenadines

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

Sint Maarten (Dutch


2010
part)
Suriname
2005
2008
2009
2010
Trinidad and
2005
Tobago
2008
2009
2010
Turks and Caicos
2005
Islands
2008
2009
2010
United States
2005
of America
2008
2009
2010
Uruguay
2005
2008
2009
2010
US Virgin Islands
2005
2008
2009
2010
Venezuela
2005
(Bolivarian
2008
Republic of)
2009
2010

NOTIFIED

43

14 116
14 289

53
0

41
3
10
4
9
0
0
0
1
394
121
11
140
1

13 884
3 152
2 678
2 732
2 706
90
102
130
128
17 906
18 036
18 127
18 848
1

2
3
0
27
57
11
78
67
40
314
0
1
21
0

50
16

8
4

1 808
2 169
2 131
2 289
1 581
1 482
1 494
1 419
2 075
2 146
2 250
2 172
30 226
29 133
28 845
28 297
113
95
63
76
0
5
4
2
12
20
8
9
7
11
9
15

1
1
1

111
106
172

49
44
1

3
0
0
0

157
275
264
214

0
6
0

1
124
103
114
92

5
14 080
12 904
11 545
11 181
607
655
667
658

28
8
21
21

6 600
6 173
6 213
6 087

18
5
5
8
10
13
6
6
1
2 748
1 074
1 578
1 048
0
1
0
0

0
0
6

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

50
29
33
58
271
64
115
243
966

89
54
69

0
0
6

0
0

0
0
0
1
2
12
76
52
31
2
0
0
0
0

0
0

2
2
2

13
3
5

1
3

94
86
91

0
0
86

13

8 869
8 071
6 514
468
160

163
13
20
26

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

228
373

2
3
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
63
0
1
4
0

381
181
184
225
195
5
3
20
19
2 026
1 370
1 535
1 266
0

39
0
112
43
62
2
0

8
0

8
103

268
167
282
286
247
191
235
211
273
154
177
214
4 989
4 534
4 324
4 180
0
0
0
4
2
0
0
0
2
1
3
0
0
4
2
2

1
1
1

8
7
15

0
3
0

0
0
0

22
47
60
44

3
3
0

2
3
1

0
1
0
155
413

1
0
0

0
0
6

44
42
1

0
2
0

69
70
58

71

24

2
0
0
0

NOTIFIED

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

43

5
74
389
11
505
0

150
48
4
17
48
46
52
2 336
1 178
803

1
1
4

0
0
0

408
323
293

19
56
37
41

13
1
1
0

350
432
428
442

43
36
0
10
3
9
0
0
1
63
121
10
119
0

8
16
16
2
4

6
5
1
2 102
919
524

0
0
0

0
0
0

2
86
94
73

12

10
0
61
19
32
40
0

26
4
28
1
40

3
62

52
19
2

31
26
24
47
26
19

100

43
22

15
117
160
160

0
43
0

14
6
0

77

54

4
27
37
36

0
0
0
3
0
0

Region of the Americas

YEAR

NEW CASES

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa

17
19
13
0
0

15
7
20
21

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

165

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[
MALE
YEAR

Anguilla

Antigua and
Barbuda

Argentina

Aruba

Bahamas

Barbados

Belize

Bermuda

Bolivia
(Plurinational
State of)

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

Bonaire, Saint
2010
Eustatius and Saba
Brazil
1995
2000
2005
2010
British Virgin
1995
Islands
2000
2005
2010
Canada
1995
2000
2005
2010
Cayman Islands
1995
2000
2005
2010
Chile
1995
2000
2005
2010
Colombia
1995
2000
2005
2010
Costa Rica
1995
2000
2005
2010
Cuba
1995
2000
2005
2010
Curaao
2010
Dominica
1995
2000
2005
2010
Dominican
1995
Republic
2000
2005
2010
Ecuador
1995
2000
2005
2010
El Salvador
1995
2000
2005
2010
Grenada
1995
2000
2005
2010
Guatemala
1995
2000
2005
2010
Guyana
1995
2000
2005
2010
Haiti
1995
2000
2005
2010

166

014

1524

2534

3544

FEMALE
4554

5564

65+

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

UNKNOWN

1
2
1

0
1
2

0
1
0

97
64
56

278
621
536

594
530
491

402
358
309

419
384
302

368
340
340

330
348
282

3
1

3
2

5
7

7
9

4
4

2
3

2
2

0
1
2
0
2

0
1
5
8
9

0
2
7
8
16

1
4
2
6
22

2
0
6
8
24

0
1
3
5
11

0
1
5
3
18

1
2
0

121
90
59

544
530
421

479
474
426

262
290
233

230
198
184

179
169
153

216
240
176

0
2

1
5

7
7

2
8

0
2

0
3

1
1

0
0
0
0
4

1
6
2
4
5

0
2
1
4
7

0
0
2
4
7

2
1
4
3
9

0
1
1
2
4

0
2
4
4
5

166
157
95

1 182
1 320
1 150

797
725
622

518
439
415

466
391
395

340
346
338

366
415
409

191
160
119

831
846
744

588
533
471

334
276
238

254
226
191

192
182
162

233
262
264

1 894
317
298

7 268
5 074
4 405

11 568
6 119
6 381

11 906
6 128
5 293

8 623
5 259
4 762

5 085
2 803
2 875

4 494
2 140
1 947

43

0
28
34
37
30

0
31
45
45
28

0
60
46
44
36

0
34
41
40
32

1
41
32
20
25

0
70
79
68
62

0
24
6
3
2

0
148
81
74
90

0
182
160
128
115

1
204
198
179
144

0
155
150
162
159

0
141
132
115
122

0
163
126
133
157

246
178
148
1
14
1
2
2
0
2
3
0

763
623
602
17
31
43
18
59
71
20
17
0

1 030
685
765
38
53
38
48
118
167
73
61
0

963
666
540
24
62
53
33
83
90
90
89
2

743
687
710
19
39
34
27
75
74
50
78
1

610
510
610
23
28
20
22
75
55
58
53
0

746
695
814
22
49
34
28
156
75
51
57
0

73
43
29

410
399
276

481
483
346

344
386
292

173
228
170

125
123
112

113
105
85

48
32

446
499

468
529

308
314

237
309

150
227

159
246

13
5
5

99
97
101

124
140
170

114
128
96

92
104
77

62
74
62

107
117
101

51
36
39
60
7
4
12
2

235
220
251
187
8
20
48
32

280
236
258
245
5
19
130
38

1
236
216
185
207
6
14
116
65

1
165
177
187
172
9
7
81
49

1
142
112
127
143
6
6
41
22

139
140
115
165
7
9
20
13

67
69
98

836
1 045
1 225

898
1 035
1 357

613
701
718

350
451
469

147
222
259

118
156
160

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

0
0

0.3
0.5
5.0

1.2
1.3
1.4

2.4
1.0

1.7

2.0

1.0
0.8
2.1
1.8
2.5

1.5
1.5
1.6

1 859
355
280

6 719
3 496
2 677

7 215
3 663
3 008

5 395
2 626
2 211

3 582
1 897
1 720

2 384
1 112
1 038

2 496
1 104
979

0
7
4
6
1

0
33
33
28
28

0
28
40
40
24

0
22
30
27
16

0
12
25
24
10

0
18
12
13
19

0
51
66
37
44

0
24
10
4
6

0
100
66
55
56

0
120
96
78
76

0
108
70
60
59

1
75
54
56
56

0
73
58
36
40

0
107
83
93
72

194
179
146
2
13
1
0
1
2
2
1
0

587
581
560
17
21
21
18
17
9
14
15
1

758
533
576
15
33
31
20
52
22
17
15
1

523
457
428
11
24
18
12
29
26
26
14
0

381
389
374
7
20
16
14
39
22
13
16
0

304
292
284
9
23
6
15
48
23
22
17
0

510
395
471
14
24
14
8
80
39
29
26
0

0
0

15

1
0
1
5
3
3

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO

65
57
43

317
339
239

325
332
207

212
209
142

115
119
102

79
72
54

75
54
62

48
52

329
298

305
308

199
178

139
158

85
113

127
110

28
6
6

81
85
63

76
82
65

63
59
49

63
50
58

39
42
51

47
70
68

51
41
38
29
3
1
14
2

224
199
339
194
5
11
41
22

1
255
167
245
190
7
8
62
25

221
175
277
179
6
7
41
19

146
135
176
139
5
5
30
20

129
87
88
108
2
5
11
10

94
111
95
103
4
3
9
6

96
116
158

914
1 097
1 268

857
1 099
1 223

513
633
608

275
414
358

132
170
207

71
132
134

1.7
2.0
2.2

1.5
1.3
1.5
1.5

1.0
1.7
2.0
2.1
2.2

1.6
1.4
1.5
1.9
1.7
2.1
2.0
2.1
3.7
2.8
3.4
1.5

1.0

1.4
1.5
1.5

1.5
1.8

1.5
1.7
1.7

3.0
1.1
1.2
0.9
1.3
1.5
2.0
2.2
2.1

1.1
1.0
1.1

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[

Honduras

Jamaica

Mexico

Montserrat

Netherlands
Antilles
Nicaragua

Panama

Paraguay

Peru

Puerto Rico

Saint Kitts and


Nevis

Saint Lucia

Saint Vincent and


the Grenadines

FEMALE

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

42
30
13
15
2
0
0
1

280
123
238
177
9
6
4
7

540
371
280
246
14
13
6
15

204
246
215
207
9
13
6
15

130
277
152
165
11
15
10
8

236
214
134
113
8
6
6
6

58
43
152
157
9
5
7
7

214
100
125

1 079
1 095
1 081

1 387
1 376
1 375

1 162
1 314
1 380

1 235
1 238
1 392

972
1 042
1 119

1 126
1 288
1 303

1
0

23
18
17
22
86
3
5
6
18
16
23
18
147
552
371

178
194
163
157
155
44
76
69
64
112
168
163
1 311
5 290
3 802

172
174
159
189
193
78
129
127
71
103
185
244
849
2 875
2 670

175
147
116
141
112
61
129
80
96
105
136
129
454
1 546
1 513

126
108
106
115
126
37
84
62
74
86
117
143
322
1 041
1 075

96
64
61
82
42
27
57
61
57
80
87
103
200
801
641

92
90
79
108
83
26
49
49
61
71
99
99
216
796
708

4
0
0
0

3
1
4
0

12
4
4
3

20
19
7
2

15
9
9
4

9
10
7
5

19
14
7
8

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
1

1
0
2

0
2
0

1
1
1

2
2
2

0
0
0

1
0
0

0
0
1

4
2
0

2
1
3

0
0
0

1
2
2

Sint Maarten (Dutch


2010
part)
Suriname
1995
2000
2005
2010
Trinidad and
1995
Tobago
2000
2005
2010
Turks and Caicos
1995
Islands
2000
2005
2010
United States
1995
of America
2000
2005
2010
Uruguay
1995
2000
2005
2010
US Virgin Islands
1995
2000
2005
2010
Venezuela
1995
(Bolivarian
2000
Republic of)
2005
2010

UNKNOWN

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

54
25
27
28
2
1
0
0

208
21
219
186
7
8
1
5

292
269
222
163
6
8
5
4

134
258
125
106
5
7
4
5

76
270
107
103
5
2
0
1

136
160
81
69
2
5
1
0

48
38
104
107
2
1
3
2

176
125
112

663
771
791

828
733
763

698
710
730

832
784
852

595
637
713

709
784
836

24
34
23
27
72
6
11
7
13
12
31
18
149
633
375

176
188
135
154
120
43
73
51
65
69
89
106
1 005
3 686
2 674

215
173
122
149
111
34
81
52
49
86
98
99
660
2 472
2 111

98
98
103
92
75
35
62
46
46
41
69
39
373
1 156
1 046

83
76
61
75
57
19
33
45
35
41
52
50
259
609
699

64
46
54
50
16
12
30
23
34
30
29
46
162
499
333

46
61
47
79
40
16
41
29
53
46
71
45
152
624
472

1
1
0
0

2
4
3
1

6
5
2
0

5
3
5
2

7
7
4
6

4
1
1
2

9
3
7
4

0
1
0

1
1
0

0
0
0

1
1
1

0
1
0

1
0
1

0
2
1

1
0
0

0
0
0

0
1
1

0
0
0

0
1
0

0
0
1

0
0
0

11

6
7

6
8

3
12

2
6

0
3

4
4

2
0

3
3

6
2

3
1

0
2

1
1

1
2

2
0
0
0

6
7
10
11

15
18
11
21

10
27
13
17

12
17
21
32

7
7
10
20

4
7
3
8

0
0
0
0

6
5
4
4

4
7
9
7

2
9
3
7

5
5
5
5

3
2
4
2

0
4
3
2

0
19
6
14
5
4
0
1
1
0

0
355
365
383
246
28
36
42
46
0

0
876
602
535
360
40
48
48
70
0

1
1 417
906
666
371
35
45
39
35
1

0
1 121
904
767
505
49
41
45
46
1

0
742
577
499
403
38
30
34
33
0

0
1 099
738
624
466
50
34
36
31
0

0
26
14
11
9
2
2
1
3

0
280
246
241
195
21
28
33
24

0
579
376
348
265
26
22
30
36

1
499
349
276
183
18
21
17
12

1
285
253
242
165
12
13
9
10

0
202
152
161
130
9
12
8
5

0
591
396
322
223
17
16
12
16

35
22

312
320

395
376

413
333

402
391

265
253

332
288

37
26

351
269

299
306

267
188

183
145

146
147

216
188

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

1.6
1.3
1.3
1.4
2.1
1.8
2.8
3.5

1.6
1.6
1.6

1.5

1.2
1.2
1.3
1.3
1.6
1.7
1.6
1.8
1.5
1.8
1.9
2.2
1.3
1.3
1.4

2.4
2.4
1.7
1.5

1.0

1.3
0.8
2.0

8.0
2.5
3.0
0.5

1
0

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO

1.4
3.6

2.8
2.6
2.4
4.0

0.5
2.3
2.3
2.2
2.0
2.3
2.1
2.2
2.5

1.4
1.6

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Region of the Americas

MALE
YEAR

167

168

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

19
136

4.0
5.9
8.1

3.8
6.6
0.5
3.3
1.8
2.8

2.6
11
3.9
11

1.5
7.9

2.3
2.2
3.2

1.9
2.7
2.3
2.0
0.1
1.1

3.2
1.7
1.6
4.9

3.6

6.5

2.0

1.5

21

5.0

2.0

1.3

<0.1

14

1.7

0.2

1.5

0.9
1.4
0.8
1.0

0.3
6.6
0.5
0.7
0
0.7

0.5
0.3
0.8

0.3
0.8

1.0

0.5

2.1

DST LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

LABORATORIES

CULTURE LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No

Out of country
Out of country
In country
Out of country
Yes

Yes

Out of country
Out of country

In country

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes

In country
Out of country
Out of country
In and out of cty
In country
No
Out of country
Out of country
In and out of cty
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
In and out of cty
Out of country
Out of country
No
In and out of cty
In country
Out of country
No
Out of country

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Out of country
In and out of cty
Out of country
In and out of cty
Out of country
In country
In and out of cty

Yes

Yes
Yes
No
Yes

Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country

No
Yes
Yes

NRL

No
Out of country
In and out of cty

SECOND-LINE
DST
AVAILABLE

Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
For smear-positive TB
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects

For certain income groups


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

No
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

TB DIAGNOSIS

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

No

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

No

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

No
Yes
Yes

FIRST-LINE DRUGS

FREE THROUGH NTP

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

No
Yes
Yes

RIFAMPICIN USED
THROUGHOUT
TREATMENT

80

95

0
100

100

100
100
0
0
100
100
100

0
0
100
90
0
100
0
0
89
100
100
0
90

100
100
0
100
0
100

100

0
0
80
50

0
90

% OF PATIENTS
TREATED WITH FDCb

DRUG MANAGEMENT

a NRL = national reference laboratory


b FDC = fixed-dose combination
c NURSES (Registered Nurses, Registered Midwives, Enrolled Nurses, Enrolled Midwives); HEALTH ASSISTANTS (Medical Assistants, Clinical Officers); LABORATORY TECHNICIANS (Microscopists)

Anguilla
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Aruba
Bahamas
Barbados
Belize
Bermuda
Bolivia
(Plurinational State of)
Bonaire, Saint Eustatius
and Saba
Brazil
British Virgin Islands
Canada
Cayman Islands
Chile
Colombia
Costa Rica
Cuba
Curaao
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
El Salvador
Grenada
Guatemala
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
Jamaica
Mexico
Montserrat
Nicaragua
Panama
Paraguay
Peru
Puerto Rico
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and
the Grenadines
Sint Maarten (Dutch part)
Suriname
Trinidad and Tobago
Turks and Caicos Islands
United States of America
Uruguay
US Virgin Islands
Venezuela
(Bolivarian Republic of)

SMEAR LABS
PER 100K
POPULATION

7$%/($/DERUDWRULHV173VHUYLFHVGUXJPDQDJHPHQWKXPDQUHVRXUFHVDQGLQIHFWLRQFRQWURO

Yes

Yes
No
Yes
Yes

No

No

No
No
No
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No

No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

No

Yes

No
No
No
No

No
No
Yes

PAEDIATRIC
FORMULATIONS
PROCURED

86

100

83

90

85
0
5

10
25

5
71
85
0
6

75
70
60

50
50
40

10
100

66

NURSES

100

29

MEDICAL
OFFICERS

78

0
16

0
2

50
65
70

100

HEALTH
ASSISTANTS

48

100

85
0
3

5
2

80
75
35

20
100
100

LABORATORY
TECHNICIANS

% OF STAFF TRAINED BY THE NTP (IN 2010)c

28

619
22

5
7
0

14

271

31

TB NOTIFICATION
RATE PER 100 000
HEALTH-CARE
WORKERS

Eastern Mediterranean Region


Table A3.1 Estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB, 19902010

171

Table A3.2 Incidence, notication and case detection rates, all forms, 19902010

173

Table A3.3 Case notications, 19902010

175

Table A3.4 Treatment outcomes, new smear-positive cases, 19952009

177

Table A3.5 Treatment outcomes, retreatment cases, 19952009

179

Table A3.6 HIV testing and provision of CPT, ART and IPT, 20052010

181

Table A3.7 Testing for MDR-TB and number of conrmed cases of MDR-TB, 20052010

182

Table A3.8 New smear-positive case notication by age and sex, 19952010

183

Table A3.9 Laboratories, NTP services, drug management, human resources and infection
control, 2010

184

Estimates of mortality, prevalence and incidence


Estimated values are shown as best estimates followed by lower and upper bounds. The lower and upper bounds are
de ned as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of outcome distributions produced in simulations. See ANNEX 1 for further
details.
Estimated numbers are shown rounded to two signicant gures. Estimated rates are shown rounded to three
signicant gures unless the value is under 100, in which case rates are shown rounded to two signicant gures.
Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are re ned, so they
may differ from those published in previous reports in this series. Estimates published in previous global TB control
reports should no longer be used.

Data source
Data shown in this annex are taken from the WHO global TB database on 2 September 2011. Data shown in the main
part of the report were taken from the database on 21 June 2011. As a result, data in this annex may differ slightly from
those in the main part of the report.
Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data.

170

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Afghanistan

Bahrain

Djibouti

Egypt

Iran (Islamic
Republic of)

Iraq

Jordan

Kuwait

Lebanon

Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya

Morocco

Oman

Pakistan

Qatar

Saudi Arabia

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

13
20
23
28
30
31
31
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
1
1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
57
62
68
74
78
80
81
55
60
65
70
72
73
74
17
20
24
27
30
31
32
3
4
5
5
6
6
6
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
6
6
6
6
25
27
29
30
31
32
32
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
112
127
145
159
167
170
174
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
2
2
16
18
20
24
26
27
27

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

7.4
11
12
11
11
11
12
<0.01
<0.01
0.018
0.011
<0.01
<0.01
0.011
0.45
0.34
0.33
0.71
0.69
0.61
0.63
2.3
1.7
1.1
1
0.94
0.78
0.66
3.2
3
3.4
2.8
2
1.6
1.3
1.6
1.8
2.1
3.1
3.8
3.8
3.9
0.065
0.052
0.04
0.023
0.022
0.038
0.044
0.01
0.012
0.015
0.023
0.021
0.034
0.034
0.076
0.099
0.041
0.032
0.047
0.063
0.09
0.46
0.25
0.27
0.23
0.24
0.25
0.25
4.5
5
2.4
2.4
2.3
2.1
2
0.043
0.025
0.025
0.025
0.029
0.029
0.028
79
89
100
81
59
58
58
0.012
0.021
0.019
0.022
0.038
0.041
0.037
0.22
0.25
0.31
0.31
0.36
0.36
0.39

(3.711)
(7.315)
(9.415)
(7.914)
(7.615)
(8.115)
(8.616)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0170.018)
(0.0110.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.010.012)
(0.190.93)
(0.20.59)
(0.210.54)
(0.481)
(0.451)
(0.380.94)
(0.40.94)
(1.92.8)
(1.32.1)
(0.81.6)
(11)
(0.940.94)
(0.780.79)
(0.660.67)
(1.36.4)
(24.5)
(2.34.7)
(1.93.9)
(1.32.9)
(12.5)
(0.792.2)
(0.782.3)
(1.12.5)
(1.52.8)
(2.14.3)
(2.75)
(2.75.1)
(2.85.2)
(0.0310.13)
(0.030.089)
(0.0250.062)
(0.0170.039)
(0.0170.036)
(0.0250.056)
(0.0310.06)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.014)
(0.0150.015)
(0.0230.023)
(0.0210.021)
(0.0340.034)
(0.0290.041)
(0.0430.2)
(0.0620.16)
(0.0280.068)
(0.0210.051)
(0.030.076)
(0.0410.093)
(0.0640.12)
(0.360.58)
(0.160.39)
(0.170.42)
(0.140.37)
(0.140.41)
(0.150.43)
(0.150.43)
(2.18.7)
(37.8)
(1.63.8)
(1.63.8)
(1.53.6)
(1.43.2)
(1.43.1)
(0.0370.051)
(0.0220.029)
(0.0220.031)
(0.0220.03)
(0.0250.035)
(0.0250.035)
(0.0240.033)
(49120)
(72110)
(82120)
(61100)
(3984)
(3884)
(3984)
(0.0110.015)
(0.0190.022)
(0.0160.022)
(0.0190.026)
(0.0330.046)
(0.0350.05)
(0.0340.044)
(0.180.26)
(0.210.3)
(0.260.37)
(0.270.38)
(0.310.43)
(0.310.44)
(0.330.46)

RATEa

57
57
52
39
36
37
38
1.1
<1
2.8
1.5
<1
<1
<1
80
54
45
88
81
70
71
4.1
2.7
1.7
1.4
1.2
<1
<1
5.8
5.1
5.2
4
2.7
2.3
1.8
9
9
9
11
13
12
12
1.9
1.2
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
<1
1.3
1.2
2.6
2.9
1.1
<1
1.1
1.5
2.1
11
5.3
5.2
4
3.9
4
4
18
19
8.5
7.8
7.3
6.5
6.2
2.3
1.1
1.1
1
1.1
1.1
<1
71
70
70
51
35
34
34
2.6
4.1
3.1
2.7
2.7
2.6
2.1
1.3
1.3
1.5
1.3
1.4
1.4
1.4

(2986)
(3777)
(4165)
(2952)
(2649)
(2750)
(2750)
(11.3)
(<1<1)
(2.72.9)
(1.51.5)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(33165)
(3194)
(2974)
(59125)
(52118)
(43108)
(45106)
(3.44.9)
(23.4)
(1.22.3)
(1.41.4)
(1.21.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(2.412)
(3.37.5)
(3.57.2)
(2.75.5)
(1.84)
(1.43.4)
(1.12.9)
(4.513)
(5.413)
(6.312)
(7.816)
(917)
(8.816)
(8.916)
(<13.7)
(<12)
(<11.3)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(11)
(<1<1)
(1.31.3)
(1.11.5)
(1.46.7)
(1.84.5)
(<11.8)
(<11.3)
(<11.8)
(<12.2)
(1.52.9)
(8.313)
(3.38.1)
(3.28.1)
(2.56.3)
(2.36.7)
(2.36.9)
(2.36.8)
(8.435)
(1129)
(5.713)
(5.112)
(4.911)
(4.510)
(4.49.7)
(22.8)
(<11.3)
(<11.4)
(<11.2)
(<11.3)
(<11.3)
(<11.2)
(44104)
(5785)
(5785)
(3866)
(2350)
(2249)
(2249)
(2.23.1)
(3.94.4)
(2.73.8)
(2.33.2)
(2.33.3)
(2.23.1)
(1.92.5)
(1.11.6)
(1.11.6)
(1.31.8)
(1.11.6)
(1.21.6)
(1.21.6)
(1.21.7)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

60
91
99
100
100
110
110
0.17
0.079
0.3
0.41
0.43
0.51
0.32
5.1
4.8
5.2
7.5
7.7
7.3
7.5
45
36
28
24
24
24
23
33
33
34
28
22
19
17
17
20
24
31
35
36
37
0.78
0.71
0.53
0.41
0.4
0.48
0.5
0.4
0.48
0.76
0.69
1.4
1.4
1.4
1.2
1.4
0.7
0.49
0.69
0.82
1
3.9
2.9
3.1
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
53
59
38
35
35
34
34
0.74
0.4
0.42
0.41
0.49
0.48
0.46
630
710
810
720
620
620
630
0.27
0.49
0.42
0.51
0.89
0.95
0.78
3.7
4.3
5.1
5.2
5.9
6
6.6

(2699)
(39150)
(44160)
(46170)
(47170)
(49180)
(51180)
(0.0480.29)
(0.0310.13)
(0.110.5)
(0.140.7)
(0.140.74)
(0.20.84)
(0.0760.57)
(1.610)
(1.68.4)
(1.78.9)
(3.412)
(3.413)
(312)
(3.113)
(2073)
(1758)
(1246)
(1039)
(1039)
(1039)
(1037)
(1166)
(1456)
(1557)
(1346)
(9.236)
(7.733)
(6.130)
(7.129)
(8.234)
(9.740)
(1451)
(1658)
(1659)
(1761)
(0.251.5)
(0.231.3)
(0.180.91)
(0.0930.71)
(0.0920.7)
(0.180.8)
(0.210.82)
(0.120.69)
(0.160.82)
(0.261.3)
(0.181.2)
(0.52.3)
(0.482.4)
(0.462.4)
(0.272.3)
(0.472.3)
(0.21.2)
(0.160.85)
(0.231.2)
(0.321.4)
(0.451.7)
(1.86.4)
(1.14.9)
(1.25.3)
(1.15.3)
(15.7)
(1.15.9)
(1.15.9)
(17100)
(23100)
(1166)
(1161)
(1060)
(9.359)
(8.958)
(0.281.2)
(0.130.69)
(0.140.73)
(0.140.7)
(0.170.84)
(0.160.82)
(0.150.78)
(2401200)
(3101200)
(3501300)
(3401200)
(2701000)
(2701000)
(2701100)
(0.0850.46)
(0.190.8)
(0.140.71)
(0.190.85)
(0.341.5)
(0.341.6)
(0.211.4)
(1.36.2)
(1.67.2)
(1.78.7)
(1.78.9)
(210)
(1.910)
(2.411)

RATE

457
457
431
362
344
348
352
34
14
46
57
41
44
25
905
763
708
927
895
834
839
79
59
41
32
31
30
28
60
56
52
40
30
26
23
99
99
99
112
118
117
117
23
16
11
7.6
6.8
7.9
8
19
29
39
30
53
53
51
39
40
19
12
17
20
24
89
60
59
53
53
53
53
213
219
132
117
112
107
105
40
18
19
17
19
18
16
565
559
562
456
371
366
364
56
97
71
62
64
59
45
23
23
26
22
23
22
24

(198760)
(198760)
(193714)
(167598)
(157568)
(159572)
(161578)
(9.858)
(5.623)
(1778)
(2097)
(1370)
(1772)
(645)
(2931827)
(2551342)
(2311217)
(4161531)
(3941485)
(3431413)
(3481411)
(36128)
(2794)
(1868)
(1353)
(1350)
(1349)
(1246)
(21121)
(2394)
(2387)
(1866)
(1350)
(1045)
(8.240)
(41168)
(41168)
(41168)
(50186)
(54195)
(53192)
(54193)
(7.543)
(5.129)
(3.819)
(1.713)
(1.612)
(313)
(3.413)
(5.533)
(9.951)
(1367)
(7.853)
(2089)
(1889)
(1787)
(9.279)
(1468)
(5.532)
(3.921)
(5.628)
(7.632)
(1139)
(41147)
(24103)
(24102)
(1891)
(1793)
(1794)
(1793)
(70409)
(84376)
(39228)
(36202)
(33193)
(29186)
(28182)
(1566)
(5.731)
(6.432)
(5.729)
(6.332)
(5.830)
(5.328)
(2161070)
(243929)
(243929)
(212744)
(159620)
(156614)
(154611)
(1896)
(38160)
(24120)
(23103)
(24107)
(21100)
(1278)
(8.439)
(8.539)
(8.644)
(7.137)
(7.539)
(7.238)
(8.741)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

25
37
43
52
56
58
59
0.14
0.057
0.22
0.31
0.36
0.36
0.29
3.5
3.9
4.5
5
5.3
5.4
5.5
20
20
17
16
15
15
15
20
21
21
17
14
14
13
11
13
15
17
19
20
20
0.54
0.55
0.4
0.36
0.35
0.34
0.33
0.33
0.37
0.59
0.63
0.96
1.1
1.1
0.95
1.1
0.63
0.43
0.57
0.63
0.72
1.7
1.9
2.1
2.3
2.5
2.5
2.5
36
41
32
29
29
29
29
0.55
0.33
0.33
0.34
0.39
0.38
0.36
260
290
330
370
390
390
400
0.21
0.35
0.32
0.37
0.65
0.71
0.67
2.8
3.1
4
4.1
4.6
4.7
5

(1537)
(3045)
(3552)
(4263)
(4668)
(4769)
(4971)
(0.120.16)
(0.0510.063)
(0.190.25)
(0.270.36)
(0.310.4)
(0.310.41)
(0.260.33)
(2.25.1)
(3.24.7)
(3.85.3)
(4.16)
(4.36.4)
(4.46.5)
(4.56.6)
(1623)
(1723)
(1520)
(1318)
(1318)
(1317)
(1217)
(1229)
(1726)
(1725)
(1420)
(1217)
(1116)
(1015)
(6.716)
(1116)
(1218)
(1421)
(1523)
(1624)
(1724)
(0.390.71)
(0.450.66)
(0.350.46)
(0.30.42)
(0.30.4)
(0.30.39)
(0.290.38)
(0.290.37)
(0.320.42)
(0.510.67)
(0.560.71)
(0.831.1)
(0.931.2)
(0.981.3)
(0.581.4)
(0.931.2)
(0.540.72)
(0.370.49)
(0.490.65)
(0.550.73)
(0.630.83)
(1.42.1)
(1.62.3)
(1.72.5)
(22.7)
(23)
(23)
(2.13)
(2550)
(3349)
(2736)
(2533)
(2533)
(2533)
(2533)
(0.490.63)
(0.290.37)
(0.290.38)
(0.30.38)
(0.340.44)
(0.330.43)
(0.320.41)
(160380)
(240360)
(270400)
(300440)
(320470)
(320470)
(330480)
(0.190.24)
(0.310.4)
(0.280.36)
(0.330.42)
(0.570.74)
(0.620.81)
(0.580.75)
(2.43.1)
(2.83.6)
(3.54.5)
(3.64.6)
(45.2)
(4.25.3)
(4.45.7)

RATE

189
189
189
189
189
189
189
28
10
34
43
34
30
23
619
619
619
619
619
620
620
34
32
26
21
19
19
18
36
36
32
24
20
19
17
64
64
64
64
64
64
64
16
13
8.4
6.7
6
5.7
5.4
16
23
30
28
38
40
41
32
31
17
11
14
15
17
40
40
40
40
40
40
40
147
152
109
95
93
92
91
30
15
15
14
15
14
13
231
231
231
231
231
231
231
45
70
54
46
47
45
38
17
17
20
17
18
18
18

(115281)
(154228)
(154228)
(154228)
(154228)
(155227)
(155226)
(2532)
(9.111)
(3039)
(3849)
(3038)
(2735)
(2026)
(390901)
(504746)
(526721)
(504746)
(504746)
(507743)
(510741)
(2940)
(2737)
(2230)
(1825)
(1622)
(1622)
(1521)
(2253)
(2943)
(2638)
(2029)
(1624)
(1522)
(1421)
(3995)
(5277)
(5277)
(5277)
(5277)
(5277)
(5277)
(1121)
(1015)
(7.29.6)
(5.67.9)
(5.26.9)
(4.96.6)
(4.76.2)
(1418)
(2026)
(2734)
(2531)
(3343)
(3546)
(3646)
(2048)
(2736)
(1419)
(9.112)
(1216)
(1317)
(1520)
(3248)
(3248)
(3248)
(3446)
(3248)
(3348)
(3348)
(102201)
(123183)
(95125)
(82109)
(80106)
(80105)
(80104)
(2634)
(1317)
(1317)
(1215)
(1317)
(1216)
(1215)
(141344)
(188279)
(188279)
(188279)
(188279)
(189278)
(189277)
(3951)
(6179)
(4861)
(4052)
(4153)
(3950)
(3343)
(1519)
(1519)
(1722)
(1519)
(1520)
(1520)
(1621)

Eastern Mediterranean Region

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

171

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%
MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)

Somalia

Sudan

Syrian Arab
Republic

Tunisia

United Arab
Emirates

West Bank
and Gaza Strip

Yemen

172

YEAR

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

7
7
7
8
9
9
9
26
30
34
38
41
42
44
12
14
16
18
20
20
20
8
9
9
10
10
10
10
2
2
3
4
6
7
8
2
3
3
4
4
4
4
12
15
18
21
23
23
24

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

5.4
5.1
5.1
4.2
4.7
5
5.2
7.8
6.2
6.1
6.7
7.7
8.3
8.3
0.88
0.79
0.42
0.43
0.37
0.35
0.28
0.22
0.2
0.19
0.17
0.2
0.21
0.23
0.019
0.034
0.015
0.017
0.019
0.02
0.022
0.038
0.061
0.079
0.075
0.062
0.058
0.055
3.7
3.1
3.1
2.9
2.1
1.8
1.4

(3.38.2)
(46.3)
(3.96.4)
(35.7)
(3.46.3)
(3.66.5)
(3.96.7)
(4.312)
(4.38.5)
(48.7)
(4.59.6)
(5.411)
(5.911)
(5.911)
(0.411.7)
(0.471.3)
(0.280.68)
(0.270.72)
(0.230.64)
(0.220.6)
(0.190.49)
(0.120.43)
(0.140.31)
(0.120.3)
(0.120.27)
(0.130.31)
(0.140.32)
(0.150.35)
(0.0170.02)
(0.0320.037)
(<0.010.023)
(0.0120.024)
(0.0140.026)
(0.0140.028)
(0.0160.031)
(0.0330.044)
(0.0510.071)
(0.0660.094)
(0.0660.086)
(0.0540.071)
(0.050.068)
(0.0460.064)
(1.96.4)
(24.6)
(24.5)
(24)
(1.43.1)
(1.12.7)
(0.862.2)

RATEa

82
78
68
50
53
54
56
29
21
18
18
19
19
19
7.1
5.6
2.6
2.3
1.9
1.7
1.4
2.7
2.2
2
1.7
2
2
2.2
1
1.5
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.8
2.3
2.5
2.1
1.6
1.5
1.4
31
20
17
14
9.5
7.7
5.9

(49124)
(6296)
(5386)
(3668)
(3970)
(4071)
(4272)
(1647)
(1428)
(1225)
(1225)
(1326)
(1426)
(1426)
(3.414)
(3.38.9)
(1.84.3)
(1.43.9)
(1.13.2)
(1.13)
(<12.4)
(1.55.2)
(1.53.5)
(1.33.2)
(1.22.7)
(1.33)
(1.43.1)
(1.53.3)
(<11.1)
(1.41.6)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.62.1)
(22.7)
(2.12.9)
(1.82.4)
(1.41.9)
(1.31.7)
(1.11.6)
(1653)
(1330)
(1125)
(9.620)
(6.214)
(4.911)
(3.69.3)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

44
42
44
41
45
46
48
66
61
64
70
78
81
82
11
9.4
6.6
6.2
5.4
5.2
4.7
3.1
3.1
2.8
2.7
3
3.1
3.3
0.28
0.51
0.3
0.36
0.41
0.41
0.47
0.35
0.52
0.66
0.61
0.51
0.48
0.45
33
33
33
29
22
20
17

(1783)
(1969)
(2071)
(1967)
(2173)
(2175)
(2378)
(27130)
(28100)
(28110)
(31120)
(35130)
(38130)
(38130)
(3.420)
(3.616)
(1.812)
(1.911)
(1.69.6)
(1.59.2)
(1.18.3)
(0.895.7)
(0.95.4)
(0.854.9)
(0.784.6)
(0.925.2)
(0.985.4)
(1.15.6)
(0.0620.5)
(0.110.91)
(0.110.59)
(0.150.64)
(0.180.71)
(0.180.74)
(0.20.83)
(0.170.54)
(0.250.81)
(0.311.1)
(0.280.97)
(0.240.81)
(0.220.77)
(0.210.72)
(1365)
(1456)
(1455)
(1348)
(9.637)
(8.233)
(6.529)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATE

667
641
589
489
501
506
513
251
204
187
183
188
191
188
86
66
42
33
28
26
23
37
35
30
27
29
30
31
15
22
9.9
8.7
6.6
5.9
6.2
17
20
21
17
13
12
11
277
219
184
139
99
85
71

(2631261)
(2891055)
(274963)
(222805)
(233819)
(235826)
(242834)
(101482)
(91337)
(82311)
(81305)
(86309)
(89313)
(88307)
(28166)
(25115)
(1273)
(1058)
(849)
(7.446)
(5.641)
(1169)
(1060)
(952)
(7.947)
(951)
(9.552)
(1053)
(3.427)
(4.939)
(3.820)
(3.716)
(2.911)
(2.511)
(2.711)
(826)
(9.531)
(9.633)
(7.827)
(6.221)
(5.620)
(5.118)
(109540)
(92371)
(78312)
(62231)
(42166)
(35143)
(27122)

19
19
21
24
25
26
27
31
36
41
46
49
50
52
7.5
6.5
5.6
4.9
4.4
4.2
4.1
2.4
2.6
2.3
2.2
2.5
2.5
2.6
0.082
0.11
0.17
0.2
0.22
0.23
0.23
0.18
0.25
0.3
0.26
0.23
0.21
0.2
16
21
20
17
14
13
12

(1128)
(1522)
(1725)
(1929)
(2131)
(2131)
(2232)
(1947)
(2943)
(3349)
(3755)
(4059)
(4161)
(4362)
(5.210)
(5.37.8)
(4.76.4)
(4.15.7)
(3.65.3)
(3.55.1)
(3.34.8)
(1.73.1)
(2.22.9)
(22.6)
(1.92.5)
(2.22.8)
(2.22.9)
(2.32.9)
(0.060.11)
(0.0780.14)
(0.110.24)
(0.140.26)
(0.170.28)
(0.170.3)
(0.160.31)
(0.170.2)
(0.220.27)
(0.260.34)
(0.230.29)
(0.20.25)
(0.190.24)
(0.170.23)
(1024)
(1725)
(1725)
(1420)
(1116)
(1015)
(9.614)

RATE

285
285
285
285
285
285
286
119
119
119
119
119
119
119
61
46
35
26
22
21
20
29
29
24
23
24
24
25
4.5
4.6
5.5
4.8
3.6
3.3
3.1
8.7
9.5
9.4
7.4
5.9
5.4
4.9
137
137
116
81
60
54
49

(174424)
(232344)
(232344)
(232344)
(232344)
(233343)
(235342)
(72177)
(97143)
(97143)
(97143)
(97143)
(97143)
(98142)
(4282)
(3755)
(3040)
(2231)
(1827)
(1725)
(1624)
(2138)
(2533)
(2128)
(2026)
(2127)
(2128)
(2228)
(3.36)
(3.36)
(3.58)
(3.46.4)
(2.74.5)
(2.44.3)
(2.14.2)
(89.5)
(8.411)
(8.111)
(6.68.2)
(5.26.6)
(4.76.1)
(4.35.6)
(83204)
(112165)
(94139)
(6697)
(4973)
(4465)
(4058)

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV

Afghanistan

Bahrain

Djibouti

Egypt

Iran (Islamic
Republic of)

Iraq

Jordan

Kuwait

Lebanon

Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya

Morocco

Oman

Pakistan

Qatar

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

13
20
23
28
30
31
31
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
1
1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
57
62
68
74
78
80
81
55
60
65
70
72
73
74
17
20
24
27
30
31
32
3
4
5
5
6
6
6
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
6
6
6
6
25
27
29
30
31
32
32
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
112
127
145
159
167
170
174
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
2
2

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

25
37
43
52
56
58
59
0.14
0.057
0.22
0.31
0.36
0.36
0.29
3.5
3.9
4.5
5
5.3
5.4
5.5
20
20
17
16
15
15
15
20
21
21
17
14
14
13
11
13
15
17
19
20
20
0.54
0.55
0.4
0.36
0.35
0.34
0.33
0.33
0.37
0.59
0.63
0.96
1.1
1.1
0.95
1.1
0.63
0.43
0.57
0.63
0.72
1.7
1.9
2.1
2.3
2.5
2.5
2.5
36
41
32
29
29
29
29
0.55
0.33
0.33
0.34
0.39
0.38
0.36
260
290
330
370
390
390
400
0.21
0.35
0.32
0.37
0.65
0.71
0.67

(1537)
(3045)
(3552)
(4263)
(4668)
(4769)
(4971)
(0.120.16)
(0.0510.063)
(0.190.25)
(0.270.36)
(0.310.4)
(0.310.41)
(0.260.33)
(2.25.1)
(3.24.7)
(3.85.3)
(4.16)
(4.36.4)
(4.46.5)
(4.56.6)
(1623)
(1723)
(1520)
(1318)
(1318)
(1317)
(1217)
(1229)
(1726)
(1725)
(1420)
(1217)
(1116)
(1015)
(6.716)
(1116)
(1218)
(1421)
(1523)
(1624)
(1724)
(0.390.71)
(0.450.66)
(0.350.46)
(0.30.42)
(0.30.4)
(0.30.39)
(0.290.38)
(0.290.37)
(0.320.42)
(0.510.67)
(0.560.71)
(0.831.1)
(0.931.2)
(0.981.3)
(0.581.4)
(0.931.2)
(0.540.72)
(0.370.49)
(0.490.65)
(0.550.73)
(0.630.83)
(1.42.1)
(1.62.3)
(1.72.5)
(22.7)
(23)
(23)
(2.13)
(2550)
(3349)
(2736)
(2533)
(2533)
(2533)
(2533)
(0.490.63)
(0.290.37)
(0.290.38)
(0.30.38)
(0.340.44)
(0.330.43)
(0.320.41)
(160380)
(240360)
(270400)
(300440)
(320470)
(320470)
(330480)
(0.190.24)
(0.310.4)
(0.280.36)
(0.330.42)
(0.570.74)
(0.620.81)
(0.580.75)

RATEb

189
189
189
189
189
189
189
28
10
34
43
34
30
23
619
619
619
619
619
620
620
34
32
26
21
19
19
18
36
36
32
24
20
19
17
64
64
64
64
64
64
64
16
13
8.4
6.7
6
5.7
5.4
16
23
30
28
38
40
41
32
31
17
11
14
15
17
40
40
40
40
40
40
40
147
152
109
95
93
92
91
30
15
15
14
15
14
13
231
231
231
231
231
231
231
45
70
54
46
47
45
38

(115281)
(154228)
(154228)
(154228)
(154228)
(155227)
(155226)
(2532)
(9.111)
(3039)
(3849)
(3038)
(2735)
(2026)
(390901)
(504746)
(526721)
(504746)
(504746)
(507743)
(510741)
(2940)
(2737)
(2230)
(1825)
(1622)
(1622)
(1521)
(2253)
(2943)
(2638)
(2029)
(1624)
(1522)
(1421)
(3995)
(5277)
(5277)
(5277)
(5277)
(5277)
(5277)
(1121)
(1015)
(7.29.6)
(5.67.9)
(5.26.9)
(4.96.6)
(4.76.2)
(1418)
(2026)
(2734)
(2531)
(3343)
(3546)
(3646)
(2048)
(2736)
(1419)
(9.112)
(1216)
(1317)
(1520)
(3248)
(3248)
(3248)
(3446)
(3248)
(3348)
(3348)
(102201)
(123183)
(95125)
(82109)
(80106)
(80105)
(80104)
(2634)
(1317)
(1317)
(1215)
(1317)
(1216)
(1215)
(141344)
(188279)
(188279)
(188279)
(188279)
(189278)
(189277)
(3951)
(6179)
(4861)
(4052)
(4153)
(3950)
(3343)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.011
0.012
0.011
0.15
0.35
0.52
0.59
0.61
0.62
0.62
<0.01
0.011
0.02
0.035
0.046
0.05
0.055
0.12
0.19
0.41
0.58
0.49
0.47
0.44

(<0.010.022)
(<0.010.022)
(<0.010.021)
(0.0150.42)
(0.160.62)
(0.350.72)
(0.420.79)
(0.410.85)
(0.50.74)
(0.490.77)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.010.035)
(0.0180.058)
(0.0230.076)
(0.0250.083)
(0.0280.09)
(0.0530.21)
(0.10.3)
(0.240.62)
(0.350.88)
(0.30.73)
(0.280.71)
(0.260.66)

1.1
1
<1
26
56
71
73
72
71
70
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER

RATEb

4 332

33

7 107
21 844
28 301
25 417
28 029
117
43
207
280
304
326
246
2 100

31
79
95
83
89
24
8
32
39
29
28
19
373

3 971
3 109
3 682
3 783
4 172
2 142
11 145
10 762
11 446
9 452
9 685
9 260
9 255
15 936
11 850
9 192
9 453
10 097
10 362
14 735
9 697
9 697
9 454
9 099
9 385
9 707
439
498
306
367
338
367
338
277
336
513
517
867
933
957

543
385
430
434
469
4
18
16
15
12
12
11
17
27
18
13
13
14
14
85
48
41
35
31
31
31
13
11
6
7
6
6
5
13
21
26
23
34
35
35

983
571
391
523
499
513
442
1 440
1 341
2 098
2 010
2 096
2 127
27 658
29 829
28 852
26 269
26 838
27 348
28 359
482
276
321
261
350
332
308
156 759
13 142
11 050
142 017
245 635
264 248
261 199
184
304
279
325
567
619
580

28
15
10
13
12
12
10
30
26
36
33
33
33
112
111
100
86
86
86
89
26
12
14
11
13
12
11
140
10
8
90
147
155
150
39
61
47
40
41
39
33

(<12.1)
(<11.9)
(<11.7)
(2.776)
(2599)
(4898)
(5298)
(48100)
(5885)
(5686)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.3)
(<11)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.010.016)
<0.01 (<0.010.015)

<1 (<1<1)
<1 (<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

<1 (<1<1)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.01
0.055
0.059
0.039
0.049
0.054
0.059

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.022)
(0.0290.089)
(0.0350.09)
(0.0230.061)
(0.0290.075)
(0.0340.077)
(0.0340.089)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.6
1.6
<1
1.2
1.3
1.4

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<12.6)
(<12.4)
(<11.5)
(<11.8)
(<11.8)
(<12.1)

0.091
0.18
0.25
0.27
0.35
0.42
0.5
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.013
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.034
0.12
0.41
0.92
1.1
1.1
1.2
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(0.0360.17)
(0.0930.3)
(0.140.38)
(0.150.42)
(0.20.53)
(0.230.67)
(0.310.75)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.014)
(<0.010.021)
(<0.010.017)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.010.1)
(0.0460.24)
(0.230.65)
(0.531.4)
(0.621.7)
(0.671.8)
(0.661.9)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

<1
<1
<1
<1
1.1
1.3
1.6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<11.1)
(<11.3)
(<11.4)
(<11.7)
(<12.1)
(<12.3)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11)
(<11)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<1 (<1<1)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

18

16
42
50
44
47
85
76
94
90
85
91
84
60

88
62
69
70
76
11
57
62
73
63
65
64
47
74
58
54
66
75
81
133
75
64
54
48
48
48
82
91
76
103
96
107
101
83
90
87
82
91
88
86

91
91
92
92
79
71
26
76
64
91
82
84
84
76
73
92
91
92
94
97
87
84
96
78
90
87
85
61
4
3
39
63
67
65
87
87
87
87
87
87
87

(1229)
(1420)
(3551)
(4262)
(3754)
(3957)
(7596)
(6885)
(83109)
(79103)
(7597)
(80105)
(7595)
(4196)
(75103)
(5276)
(5885)
(5886)
(6392)
(913)
(4868)
(5374)
(6286)
(5475)
(5677)
(5575)
(3277)
(6291)
(4871)
(4567)
(5581)
(6291)
(6899)
(89218)
(6292)
(5378)
(4567)
(4059)
(4059)
(4059)
(62114)
(75111)
(6688)
(87122)
(84112)
(93124)
(89117)
(7494)
(79104)
(77100)
(7393)
(80104)
(77100)
(7698)
(79106)
(79106)
(80106)
(80106)
(6991)
(6282)
(2131)
(6393)
(5379)
(79107)
(68101)
(70103)
(70102)
(55110)
(6190)
(80106)
(79106)
(81107)
(82108)
(85112)
(7799)
(7596)
(84111)
(7087)
(79103)
(7799)
(7596)
(41100)
(45)
(34)
(3248)
(5378)
(5682)
(5479)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Eastern Mediterranean Region

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

173

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Saudi Arabia

Somalia

Sudan

Syrian Arab
Republic

Tunisia

United Arab
Emirates

West Bank
and Gaza Strip

Yemen

174

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

16
18
20
24
26
27
27
7
7
7
8
9
9
9
26
30
34
38
41
42
44
12
14
16
18
20
20
20
8
9
9
10
10
10
10
2
2
3
4
6
7
8
2
3
3
4
4
4
4
12
15
18
21
23
23
24

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

2.8
3.1
4
4.1
4.6
4.7
5
19
19
21
24
25
26
27
31
36
41
46
49
50
52
7.5
6.5
5.6
4.9
4.4
4.2
4.1
2.4
2.6
2.3
2.2
2.5
2.5
2.6
0.082
0.11
0.17
0.2
0.22
0.23
0.23
0.18
0.25
0.3
0.26
0.23
0.21
0.2
16
21
20
17
14
13
12

(2.43.1)
(2.83.6)
(3.54.5)
(3.64.6)
(45.2)
(4.25.3)
(4.45.7)
(1128)
(1522)
(1725)
(1929)
(2131)
(2131)
(2232)
(1947)
(2943)
(3349)
(3755)
(4059)
(4161)
(4362)
(5.210)
(5.37.8)
(4.76.4)
(4.15.7)
(3.65.3)
(3.55.1)
(3.34.8)
(1.73.1)
(2.22.9)
(22.6)
(1.92.5)
(2.22.8)
(2.22.9)
(2.32.9)
(0.060.11)
(0.0780.14)
(0.110.24)
(0.140.26)
(0.170.28)
(0.170.3)
(0.160.31)
(0.170.2)
(0.220.27)
(0.260.34)
(0.230.29)
(0.20.25)
(0.190.24)
(0.170.23)
(1024)
(1725)
(1725)
(1420)
(1116)
(1015)
(9.614)

RATEb

17
17
20
17
18
18
18
285
285
285
285
285
285
286
119
119
119
119
119
119
119
61
46
35
26
22
21
20
29
29
24
23
24
24
25
4.5
4.6
5.5
4.8
3.6
3.3
3.1
8.7
9.5
9.4
7.4
5.9
5.4
4.9
137
137
116
81
60
54
49

(1519)
(1519)
(1722)
(1519)
(1520)
(1520)
(1621)
(174424)
(232344)
(232344)
(232344)
(232344)
(233343)
(235342)
(72177)
(97143)
(97143)
(97143)
(97143)
(97143)
(98142)
(4282)
(3755)
(3040)
(2231)
(1827)
(1725)
(1624)
(2138)
(2533)
(2128)
(2026)
(2127)
(2128)
(2228)
(3.36)
(3.36)
(3.58)
(3.46.4)
(2.74.5)
(2.44.3)
(2.14.2)
(89.5)
(8.411)
(8.111)
(6.68.2)
(5.26.6)
(4.76.1)
(4.35.6)
(83204)
(112165)
(94139)
(6697)
(4973)
(4465)
(4058)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.12
0.15
0.31
0.6
1.1
1.7
1.9
2.1
0.4
0.86
1.8
3.7
5.5
6.3
7.1

(0.0910.15)
(<0.010.51)
(0.0880.66)
(0.251.1)
(0.681.7)
(1.12.5)
(1.12.8)
(1.62.7)
(0.0171.4)
(0.192)
(0.913)
(2.45.3)
(3.67.8)
(4.18.9)
(4.89.9)

<1
2.3
4.7
8.1
14
19
21
23
1.5
2.9
5.3
9.7
13
15
16

(<1<1)
(<17.7)
(1.310)
(3.415)
(8.121)
(1228)
(1331)
(1829)
(<15.1)
(<16.7)
(2.78.8)
(6.314)
(8.819)
(9.821)
(1123)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.011
0.017
0.019
0.022

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.018)
(<0.010.027)
(0.010.031)
(0.0120.035)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.010.013)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<1 (<1<1)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

NUMBER

RATEb

2 415

15

3 452
3 539
4 025
4 043
4 422

17
15
15
15
16

2 504
5 686
12 904
12 481
11 075
10 139
212
14 320
24 807
27 562
24 281
26 001
26 131
6 018
4 404
5 090
4 310
3 724
4 050
3 666
2 054
2 383
2 038
2 079
2 280
2 155
2 368
285

38
77
154
140
121
109
<1
48
73
72
59
61
60
49
31
32
23
19
20
18
25
27
22
21
22
21
23
16

115
103
93
116
131
64
77
82
28
40
35
31
4 650
14 428
13 651
9 063
8 290
8 562
8 916

4
3
1
2
2
3
3
3
<1
1
<1
<1
39
95
77
44
37
37
37

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

87

87
87
87
86
88

13
27
54
49
43
38
1
40
61
60
49
51
50
81
68
92
89
85
96
90
87
92
90
93
92
85
91
348

68
53
42
51
57
35
31
27
11
18
16
16
28
69
67
54
61
67
76

(77100)
(7799)
(7799)
(77100)
(7697)
(77100)
(1117)
(2233)
(4566)
(4160)
(3552)
(3246)
(01)
(3349)
(5175)
(5074)
(4161)
(4363)
(4261)
(60115)
(5683)
(79107)
(75106)
(70104)
(80117)
(76110)
(67118)
(81106)
(78104)
(82107)
(82105)
(7697)
(81104)
(264479)
(47107)
(4074)
(3354)
(3870)
(4283)
(3238)
(2835)
(2432)
(1012)
(1620)
(1519)
(1418)
(1947)
(5885)
(5582)
(4567)
(5075)
(5683)
(6392)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Afghanistan

33

89

Bahrain

24

19

Djibouti

373

469

Egypt

11

Iran (Islamic
Republic of)

17

14

Iraq

85

31

Jordan

13

Kuwait

13

35

Lebanon

12

Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya

10

33

Morocco

112

89

Oman

26

11

Pakistan

140

150

Qatar

39

33

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
4 332

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

OTHER RELAPSE

7 107
21 844
28 301
25 417
28 029
117
43
207
280
304
326
246
2 100

2 892
9 949
13 136
12 497
12 947

2 358
6 085
7 903
6 108
7 085

1 620
4 954
6 127
5 730
6 248

633

237
856
1 135
1 082
1 116

17
23
101
141
131
90

14
16
72
59
74
58

85
8
107
104
121
98

0
0
0
0

3 971
3 109
3 682
3 783
4 172
2 142
11 145
10 762
11 446
9 452
9 685
9 260
9 255
15 936
11 850
9 192
9 453
10 097
10 362
14 735
9 697
9 697
9 454
9 099
9 385
9 707
439
498
306
367
338
367
338
277
336
513
517
867
933
957

1 391
1 120
1 375
1 377
1 181

518
739
477
507
538

1 875
1 058
1 669
1 710
2 253

4 229
4 606
5 217
5 102
5 201
4 679

9 204
2 693
2 617
1 190
1 238
1 158

4 684
2 843
3 163
2 676
2 850
3 048

5 347
5 361
4 581
4 722
5 152
5 188
1 587
3 194
3 194
3 096
3 150
3 347
3 618

6 432
2 642
1 807
1 865
1 926
1 985
12 394
13 962
3 188
2 887
2 727
2 666
2 693

3 779
3 442
2 530
2 569
2 685
2 869
754
1 367
2 753
2 703
2 718
2 904
3 009

187
89
86
104
109
117

210
69
76
68
64
69

175
180
187
345
386
385

983
571
391
523
499
513
442
1 440
1 341
2 098
2 010
2 096
2 127
27 658
29 829
28 852
26 269
26 838
27 348
28 359
482
276
321
261
350
332
308
156 759
13 142
11 050
142 017
245 635
264 248
261 199
184
304
279
325
567
619
580

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

0
208
209

237
856
1 135
1 290
1 325

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0

184
192
161
189
200

61
35
21
19

184
253
196
210
219

0
0

0
0
0
0

753
620
449
484
396
375

289
308
352
328

753
620
738
792
748
703

0
0
0
0

0
0
0

477
405
274
297
334
320

154
126
439
440

477
405
428
423
773
760

20
0
0
0

0
0
0

68
562
768
504
468
387

181
283
390

68
562
768
685
751
777

0
0
0

101
145
187
165
190
150

12
0
0
0

6
3
6
1
4
2

4
0
16
16

6
3
10
1
20
18

0
18
4
0

42
89
95
158
155
163

115
244
234
363
391
407

0
0
0
0
0
0

4
0
1
1
1
2

0
0
0
0
0
0

4
0
1
1
1
2

0
0
0
0
0
0

197
202
131
158
179
194

528
149
75
123
94
99

255
214
181
231
218
210

0
0
0
0

3
6
4
11
8
10

0
0
2
2

3
6
4
11
10
12

0
0
0
0

607
860
871
936

626
82
474
390
455

814
652
762
749
696

269

271

0
0

14

23

14 171
12 872
12 757
11 825
11 907
12 239

4 095
2 934
2 142
2 002
2 021
2 174

11 563
13 046
11 370
11 646
12 131
12 730

0
0
0
0

1 365
1 289
1 216

281
316
429

1 646
1 605
1 645

0
0
0

135
164
131
171
164
152

60
37
37
48
36
28

81
112
89
129
127
124

0
0
0

0
8
4
2
5
4

2
2
5

0
8
4
4
7
9

0
0
0

2 578
3 285
48 220
100 102
101 887
104 263

3 806
5 578
68 337
106 207
112 948
105 623

3 037
1 846
22 789
34 386
43 416
45 443

184
341
2 671
4 940
5 997
5 870

2 754
3 043
3 203
5 055

184
341
5 425
7 983
9 200
10 925

3 036

60
53
96
201
220
223

135
98
73
112
102
101

109
128
156
254
297
256

0
0
0

1
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

1
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

0
733

0
0
0
0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

55
62
62
67
65

55
59
58
71
64
61

73
60
74
73
69

31
63
67
81
81
80

45
67
72
72
73
72
11
19
50
52
54
56
57

47
56
53
60
63
63

81
67
66
69
71
70

27
58
64
56
66
66

88
64
69
67

78
81
86
86
85
85

69
82
78
78
82
84

40
37
41
49
47
50

31
35
57
64
68
69

Eastern Mediterranean Region

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

175

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV
NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

YEAR

Saudi Arabia

15

16

Somalia

109

Sudan

60

Syrian Arab
Republic

49

18

Tunisia

25

23

United Arab
Emirates

16

West Bank
and Gaza Strip

Yemen

39

176

37

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
2 415

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

3 452
3 539
4 025
4 043
4 422

1 595
1 722
2 108
2 201
2 302

722
545
545
578
687

1 023
1 067
1 266
1 170
1 311

2 504
5 686
12 904
12 481
11 075
10 139
212
14 320
24 807
27 562
24 281
26 001
26 131
6 018
4 404
5 090
4 310
3 724
4 050
3 666
2 054
2 383
2 038
2 079
2 280
2 155
2 368
285

1 572
3 776
7 068
6 520
6 047
5 225

692
837
3 168
2 983
2 604
2 654

318
722
2 258
2 357
1 965
1 885

8 761
12 311
12 730
10 800
10 541
9 958

2 655
6 512
9 212
7 849
8 897
9 144

1 675
3 843
5 434
4 715
5 530
6 217

1 295
1 584
1 350
1 116
1 143
1 122

1 507
1 409
796
667
796
544

1 574
2 000
2 103
1 888
2 036
1 948

1 243
1 099
915
1 005
931
1 091

407
179
239
355
232
151

733
727
874
882
950
1 090

73
62
50
71
56

3
12
17
15
28

41
25
25
30
47

9
37
7
16
10
13
0
3 681
5 565
3 379
3 540
3 576
3 584

58

10

6
3
9
6

15
21
15
12

7 390
4 176
2 780
2 032
2 108
2 313

3 082
3 470
2 553
2 307
2 564
2 715

115
103
93
116
131
64
77
82
28
40
35
31
4 650
14 428
13 651
9 063
8 290
8 562
8 916

OTHER RELAPSE

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

112
205
106
94
122

0
0
0
0

134
351
410
621
459
375

102
0
196
330

134
351
512
621
655
705

474
2 141
186
917
957
812

1 616
1 163
1 036
1 110

474
2 141
1 802
2 080
1 993
1 922

28
97
61
53
75
52

83
214
101
54

28
97
144
267
176
106

0
0
76

0
0
0
0

39
50
84

112
205
145
144
206

43

0
0
0
0

61
51
38
42
36

0
0
107

61
51
38
42
36

0
0
0
0

0
4
1
0
0

2
0
0
1

0
6
1
0
1

0
0
0
0

0
0
0

0
1
0

1
1
0

1
2
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

275
440
351
411
314
304

0
134

275
440
351
411
314
438

0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

69
76
79
79
77

69
82
69
69
70
66

77
65
58
58
54
52

46
53
63
63
59
67

75
86
79
74
80
88

96
84
75
83
67

13

54
84
53
68

33
57
55
64
63
61

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Afghanistan

86

Bahrain

98

Djibouti

75

79

62

88

Egypt

Iran (Islamic
Republic of)

83

80

90

92

75

71

85

91

82

Iraq

Jordan

Kuwait

Lebanon

Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya

65

Morocco

90

84

84

98

70

91

81

80

Oman

Pakistan

Qatar

Saudi Arabia

65

86

85

79

80

Somalia

Sudan

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

2 892
9 949
13 213
13 136
12 497
17
23
101
109
141
131

3 136
10 013
13 213
13 136
12 497

1 391
1 120
1 208
1 375
1 377
4 229
4 606
5 217
4 887
5 102
5 201
5 347
5 361
4 581
4 701
4 722
5 152
3 194
3 194
3 096
2 726
3 150
3 347
187
89
86
109
104
109
175
180
187
274
345
386
197
202
131
143
158
179

22
15
160
142
192
1 751
1 391
1 120
1 205
1 375
1 277
2 118
4 611
5 154
4 887
5 101
5 201
5 866
4 581
4 707
4 824
5 201
11 553
3 194
3 096
2 726
3 150
3 347
193
89
86
109
104
109
175
180
187
274
345
386
200
190
131
143
158
179
626

607
860
772
871
936
14 171
12 872
12 757
11 937
11 825
11 907
135
164
131
187
171
164
2 578
3 285
48 220
88 747
100 102
101 887
60
53
96
116
201
220

14 171
12 872
12 683
11 937
11 956
11 935
93
112
104
187
171
334
802
4 074
48 205
88 502
100 103
101 809
43
53
96
116
201
5

1 595
1 722
1 984
2 108
2 201
1 572
3 776
7 068
6 130
6 520
6 047
8 761
12 311
12 730
12 627
10 800
10 541

1 285
1 722
1 920
2 104
2 201
1 278
3 776
7 059
6 150
6 520
6 047
8 326
14 599
12 730
12 958
10 766
10 883

860
772
872

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

108
101
100
100
100

96
15
147
101
147

100
100
100
100
93
50
100
99
100
100
100

109
100
100
102
101
362
100
100
100
100
100
103
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
102
94
100
100
100
100

100
100
100

100
100
99
100
101
100
69
68
79
100
100
204
31
124
100
100
100
100
72
100
100
100
100
2

81
100
97
100
100
81
100
100
100
100
100
95
119
100
103
100
103

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

76
83
82
83
83

9
7
5
5
4

3
2
2
2
2

3
1
1
1
1

6
2
2
2
2

2
5
8
7
9

73
93
14
8
98
60
48
71
72
78
72
38
75
66
72
69
72

0
0
0
0
0
16
14
9
9
6
7
24
12
13
16
20
16

27
7
4
1
2
3
2
1
1
1
1
2
3
3
3
3
3

0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
1
3
2
2
2
3
2

0
0
0
0
0
20
21
16
14
13
17
19
5
3
3
3
4

0
0
82
90
0
1
14
2
2
2
3
14
3
13
3
3
3

81
78
76
78
77
60
86
76
78
79
80
91
89
71
66
73
54
40
54
53
41
43
41
35
89
81
78
63
65
65

4
5
6
6
6
20
5
10
8
9
10
1
1
12
11
11
21
31
15
10
38
37
44
56
3
11
12
13
17
0

6
7
8
8
7
0
3
3
2
3
2
3
2
5
5
3
6
3
1
1
0
0
0
0
4
2
1
3
6
1

2
3
2
3
3
5
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
7
0
1
7
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1

3
3
3
2
2
10
3
7
8
6
6
2
4
6
9
4
11
1
9
7
7
7
4
10
3
6
4
2
2
33

3
4
5
3
5
5
1
3
2
1
1
3
2
0
9
9
0
25
21
29
14
12
11
0
1
0
4
18
10
0

40
43
52

29
24
17

2
2
3

0
0
1

27
27
24

2
4
4

75
82
76
78
79
77
84
93
90
91
96
49
51
58
71
77
74
74
81
66
74
60
60
80

14
7
5
8
7
8
0
0

1
1
1
1
1
2
1
3

7
7
9
10
10
9
1
0

0
2
49
20
16
13
14
16
17
0
0
9
7
13
0

2
3
2
2
2
2
9
4
10
9
2
2
4
4
3
2
2
2
5
8
1
0
1
0

0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
20
17
9
4
5
4
0
0
0
1
0
20

1
1
7
1
1
2
5
0
0
0
0
0
4
4
4
2
3
2
14
26
16
32
26
0

62
60
59
54
54
82
81
85
82
78
83
44
50
64
60
62
62

11
5
8
6
11
4
2
4
4
3
2
35
25
18
18
20
19

7
7
6
6
6
4
4
4
4
3
4
2
4
3
3
3
3

0
1
1
2
1
5
2
1
2
2
2
7
2
1
1
1
1

13
10
13
8
10
5
3
4
3
3
3
11
9
9
7
10
10

6
17
12
24
18
0
9
2
5
11
7
1
11
5
11
5
6

Eastern Mediterranean Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

177

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

Syrian Arab
Republic

61

88

Tunisia

83

United Arab
Emirates

73

West Bank
and Gaza Strip

100

82

52

88

Yemen

178

YEAR

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

1 295
1 584
1 350
1 155
1 116
1 143
1 243
1 099
915
941
1 005
931

1 295
1 562
1 350
1 155
1 115
1 144

73
62
56
50
71
9
37
7
13
16
10
3 681
5 565
3 379
3 537
3 540
3 576

73
62
59
53
71
13

100
99
100
100
100
100

100
99
100
96
100

100
100
105
106
100
144

171
108
100
110
100
100
106
100
100
99

1 099
910
941
967
931

12
14
16
11
3 681
5 565
3 566
3 523
3 540
3 557

CURED

45
69
76
76
86
76

COMPLETED

16
10
13
13

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

12

2
4
3
3
3
4

9
3
2
1
2
1

24
11
6
6
6
4

5
4
1
2
2
3

87
83
74
76
72

4
7
15
10
11

3
2
3
3
3

2
1
1
1
2

2
2
2
2
3

2
4
4
8
9

56
42
20
25
21
100

18
31
44
43
52

7
6
12
9
11

4
0
3
0
1

5
15
20
23
14

10
6
0
0
0
0

58
50
38
18
43
59
69
75
75
79

42
43
56
64
9
13
11
9
9
9

0
0
0
9
1
3
3
3
3
3

0
7
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1

0
0
6
9
35
14
6
5
5
4

0
0
0
0
11
10
10
6
7
4

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Afghanistan

Bahrain

Djibouti

75

Egypt

78

Iran (Islamic
Republic of)

73

Iraq

84

Jordan

79

Kuwait

100

Lebanon

80

Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya

Morocco

76

69

Oman

100

Pakistan

70

82

67

Qatar

Saudi Arabia

60

Somalia

60

Sudan

70

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

237
856
1 078
1 135
1 290
0

304
856
1 078

0
2
0
0
184
253
228
196
210
753
620
738
585
792
748
477
405
428
444
423
773
68
562
768
554
685
751
6
3
10
11
1
20
4
0
1
1
1
1
3
6
4
3
11
10

271
0

0
0
0
268
253
192
196
194
956
738
585
779
748
606
448
447
692
708

953
797
685
751
6
3
12
24

1
1
1
1
5
4
3
11
10

0
32

23
1 469

1 646
1 605
0
8
4
6
4
7
184
341
5 425
7 738
7 983
9 200
1
0
0
0
0
0
112
205
150
145
144
134
351
512
497
621
655
474
2 141
1 802
2 095
2 080
1 993

1 650
1 421
1 535
1 668
7
6
4
7
374
907
5 009
7 184
7 685
8 801
3

0
0
0
139
96
133
141
151
351
524
0
621
655

1 828
1 914
1 953
2 147

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

128
100
100

146
100
84
100
92

154
100
100
98
100

150
105
101
164
92

124
144
100
100

200

27
1 200
120

100
100
100
100

83
100
100
100
100

93
104

88

100
100
100
203
266
92
93
96
96
300

124
47
89
97
105

100
102
0
100
100

101
91
94
108

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

73
87
80

5
2
3

4
3
4

4
1
2

11
2
2

3
5
9

27
58
56
66
67

9
10
11
9
8

0
3
2
3
3

3
2
3
2
2

22
24
23
14
18

37
2
5
6
3

52
41
49
39
39

11
17
16
32
39

7
10
8
8
6

12
12
10
8
5

13
8
8
9
7

5
12
9
4
4

63
68
68
57
48

13
8
9
15
25

6
9
8
8
8

5
3
3
4
3

6
4
5
5
5

7
8
8
11
11

60
58
62
57

12
14
18
27

4
4
2
3

8
4
4
3

12
17
11
9

4
2
2
1

83

17

0
8
17

67
67
63

33
0
4

0
8
0

0
17
17

0
0
0

0
0
0
0

100
100
100
100

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

80
75
67
55
60

25
33
9
20

0
0
27
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

20
0
0
9
20

31

63

65

12

10

55
65
65
60

17
8
8
9

4
4
4
4

5
3
5
3

14
14
18
16

5
6
1
8

86

14

100
50
57
48
37
61
61
62
63
67

0
50
43
22
17
15
18
17
18
0

0
0
0
2
6
5
4
5
4
0

0
0
0
5
3
3
3
3
3
0

0
0
0
24
29
11
11
10
8
0

0
0
0
0
8
5
3
4
3
33

43
40
46
34
45

15
9
16
10
15

7
9
6
5
8

3
5
3
4
1

13
18
27
16
17

19
19
2
31
14

53
76

48
50

1
5

4
10

5
6

5
6

5
2

2
4

3
5

3
3

34
6

38
27

53
50
39
33

29
30
35
38

3
3
2
3

1
0
1
1

9
6
14
15

6
11
8
10

Eastern Mediterranean Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

179

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Syrian Arab
Republic

70

Tunisia

United Arab
Emirates

West Bank
and Gaza Strip

Yemen

43

180

77

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

28
97
144
148
267
176

SIZE OF
COHORT

189
144
279
266
176

61
51
27
38
42

42

0
6
5
1
0

5
5
1
0

1
1
2
275
440
351
325
411
314

0
0
0
0
14
437
351
324
376
291

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

195
100
189
100
100

69

83
100
100

0
0
0
5
99
100
100
91
93

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

44
53
25
26
48

10
14
47
51
22

4
5
5
5
9

20
9
8
5
4

15
19
13
12
15

7
0
3
3
3

74

10

10

80
40
100

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
20
0

20
20
0

0
20
0

29
64
48
64
66
70

14
8
9
7
9
7

21
7
2
4
3
3

14
6
3
3
3
4

14
11
7
7
9
7

7
4
30
15
10
9

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

YEAR

Afghanistan

18

46

65

Bahrain

Djibouti

52

47

66

Egypt

Iran (Islamic
Republic of)

Iraq

Jordan

23

100

100

100

Kuwait

Lebanon

46

Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya

Morocco

Oman

98

100

Pakistan

Qatar

100

100

Saudi Arabia

72

26

41

Somalia

Sudan

Syrian Arab
Republic

Tunisia

United Arab
Emirates

100

46

100

West Bank
and Gaza Strip

Yemen

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS

0
4
18
46
72
79
65
7
44
55
52

5
32
47

7
7
8

49
63
66
23
29
100
100
100
100
100
100
1
28
59
46

48
45

5
3
0
98
100
100
100
0
3
3
2
100
100
100
100

47
72
3

8
26
1
14
60
41
8
5

2
6
4
4
8

99
100
46
98
97
100

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

0
1 175
5 170
128
218
256
161
224
1 638
2 091
2 163
521
3 204
4 483
670
700
864
4 513
6 121
6 711
86
104
387
354
517
867
933
957
3
144
298
238
970
950

1 254
930
96
257
352
334
313
0
8 450
8 208
6 289
325
567
619
580

1 929
3 278
375
875
2 741
180
3 680
16 168
11 123
345
203
85
129
89
80
200

115
132
13
40
35
31

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)
21 844
28 301
26 358
28 238
280
304
326
246
3 170
3 717
3 804
4 191
11 735
9 760
10 037
9 588
9 366
9 579
10 536
10 802
9 454
9 280
9 668
10 097
371
356
387
354
517
867
933
957
391
523
501
515
2 367
2 010
2 110
26 269
27 119
27 664
28 788
261
352
334
313
144 771
248 678
267 451
269 290
325
567
619
580
3 539
4 064
4 093
4 549
13 006
12 481
11 271
10 469
29 178
25 444
27 037
27 241
4 393
3 938
4 151
3 827
2 079
2 280
2 155
2 368
105
93
116
132
28
41
36
31
9 063
8 290
8 562
9 050

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE

0
5
0
6
7
8
6
135
191
207
248
9
11
7
213
223
232
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
3
2
4
3
3
10
25
19
174
144

21
99
6
10
8
3
4
0
17
31
22
1
0
0
31
63
77
21
107
231
150
471
692
691
0
0
5
2
2
2
11

2
0
0
0
0

0
0
5
3
3
4
60
12
10
11

2
0
0

32
32
27

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
100
7
8
8

18
15

2
11
6
4
2
1
1

0
0
0

0
0
0

3
2
6

12
8
83
13
4
6
0
0

6
2
2
3
6

2
0
0
0
0

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

100

0
0
0
0
15
85

100
100
0

8
13
12

100
100
100

100
100
100
100

100
100
100

23

100
100
100
100

100
23

100

100

38

88
68
10
32
43
58

100
0
0
0

100

0
14
13
0
15
29
23
11

100
100
71

13
21
19

0
0
0

100
100
100
100

100
100
100

45

100
100
100
100

100
39
9

100

100

7
26
10
52
54
54

100
100
100
100

0
0

0
1
0
443
418
161
45
0
0
0
2
0
0
0

5
19
68
144

0
0
0
0

2
0

12

0
0

0
0
51
24
24

0
0

Eastern Mediterranean Region

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

181

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

YEAR
Afghanistan

Bahrain

Djibouti

Egypt

Iran (Islamic
Republic of)

Iraq

Jordan

Kuwait

Lebanon

Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya

Morocco

Oman

Pakistan

Qatar

Saudi Arabia

Somalia

Sudan

Syrian Arab
Republic

Tunisia

United Arab
Emirates

West Bank
and Gaza Strip

Yemen

182

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa

19
4
0
0
0
39

96
204
27
19
58
63
72
110
19
6
8
10
6
8
9
5
3
3
4
7
8
7

180
143
54
5
4
5
1
40
49
444
2
5
3
4
21
14

57
45
70
94
62
7
31
14
25
36
21
12
4
1
0

0
0
1
2
13
4

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED
20 988
27 166
24 335
26 913
280
304
326
246
2 917
3 521
3 594
3 972
10 997
8 968
9 289
8 885
8 918
9 156
9 763
10 042
8 686
8 595
8 917
9 320
361
337
363
336
516
866
932
955
387
512
491
503
2 096
2 010
2 087
26 269
25 473
26 059
27 143
257
348
327
304
139 346
240 695
258 251
255 329
325
567
619
580
3 334
3 919
3 949
4 300
12 494
11 860
10 616
9 764
27 376
23 364
25 044
25 319
4 249
3 671
3 975
3 614
2 028
2 242
2 113
2 332
99
92
116
131
28
40
34
31
8 712
7 879
8 248
8 612

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

238
2
24
42
162
0

42
60
205
208
271
0
0
0
98
58
95
74
516
866
427
437
48
7
14
4
4
4

180
140
47
125
139
248
185
2
5
9
264
440
322
324

488
93
125
0
0
63

380
6

0
0
66
42
89

1
1
8
13
66
0

0
1

2
2

0
0
0
27
17
26
22
100
100
46
46
12
1
3
1
0
0

1
1

0
49
40
76
61

0
0
0
81
78
52
56

0
0

0
0

18
0

0
0

1
1
1

13
2
0
0
0
0

7
10
7
3
17
0
0
0
9
5
6
5
6
8
9
5
0
0
1
2
4
4

NOTIFIED
856
1 135
1 290
1 325
0
0
0
0
253
196
210
219
738
792
748
703
428
423
773
760
768
685
751
777
10
1
20
18
1
1
1
2
4
11
10
12
271

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

34
0
0
0
0
0

792
775
41
90
169
173
163
185
33
4
7
7
1
1
1
0
4
11
10
14
7

23

9
0
0
3
4
0
2
5
9
2
5
3
4

27
36
35
0
0
13
8
5
6
1

0
0
1
2
3

1 646
1 605
1 645
4
4
7
9
5 425
7 983
9 200
10 925
0
0
0
0
205
145
144
206
512
621
655
705
1 802
2 080
1 993
1 922
144
267
176
106
51
38
42
36
6
1
0
1
1
2
0
351
411
314
438

305
403
11
12
7
8
38
60
306
0
0
0
0

79
4
65
207
0
0
14
12

6
1

0
0
56
30
34

100
104

10
21

22

25
22
24
330
400
35
39
100
100
100
0
100
100
100
117

19

24
275
300
100
89

0
1
3

11
0
3
10

0
0
8
11

17

100

14
10
8

6
2
0
0
0
0

89
190
15
16
41
63
72
110
10
1
2
3
0
0
0
0
2
3
3
5
4
3

57
54
5
1
1
1
38
43
306
0
0
0
0

30
4
34
59
0
0
14
12
28
6
4
0

0
0
1
11
1

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[

Afghanistan

Bahrain

Djibouti

Egypt

Iran (Islamic
Republic of)

Iraq

Jordan

Kuwait

Lebanon

Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya

Morocco

Oman

Pakistan

Qatar

Saudi Arabia

Somalia

Sudan

Syrian Arab
Republic

Tunisia

United Arab
Emirates

West Bank
and Gaza Strip

Yemen

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

FEMALE

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

52
151
197
0
0
0
0

228
606
986
0
0
0
10

183
560
819
1
3
0
16

149
472
491
2
2
2
11

129
453
490
3
5
3
12

94
470
641
1
3
0
4

80
419
622
3
4
4
4

17
18
28
223
21
25
9
118
29
16
18
1 125
21
13
42
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
1
3
5
0
1
2
5
2

302
220
211
542
641
524
358
751
438
352
292
862
627
424
370
19
8
8
5
15
10
12
16
26
16
12
8
112
101
114

347
252
243
665
827
606
617
754
467
531
487
1 409
317
644
482
37
16
17
14
51
44
45
67
32
28
19
21
212
239
293

139
119
151
460
667
421
783
636
387
338
354
1 085
297
261
384
17
13
9
10
32
32
29
50
30
20
15
15
78
86
168

67
62
67
408
476
414
725
494
295
281
296
863
205
245
276
20
9
4
12
17
21
26
48
16
15
10
12
46
36
52

60
47
49
463
307
243
407
737
344
260
310
900
135
189
286
26
14
6
12
9
11
8
10
16
17
12
12
22
29
19

42
29
20
160
158
123
217
921
642
630
760
271
101
148
228
11
2
5
6
0
5
3
11
10
14
8
10
21
32
35

142
99
79
51
1
1
1
2
29
55
621
1 548
0
0
0

2 508
2 061
2 222
1 982
7
8
21
12
274
498
5 278
11 860
8
7
19
59

2 872
2 423
2 515
2 553
12
9
11
27
230
387
4 759
10 462
12
19
15
72

1 737
1 705
1 583
1 611
7
11
24
15
178
256
4 263
8 320
11
9
17
38

819
855
1 057
1 273
7
12
15
16
140
232
3 834
7 969
13
7
19
22

573
485
580
712
10
9
19
8
124
153
3 332
6 934
4
2
5
5

553
595
591
515
11
11
5
10
95
130
2 453
6 066
4
1
1
0

0
8
14
46
113
125
109
250
785
425
209
13
8
9
7

131
182
335
334
740
1 343
1 036
604
1 028
1 358
1 185
332
359
266
170

268
276
458
730
724
1 114
886
796
1 511
1 990
1 781
255
289
237
212

213
201
242
201
408
725
496
634
1 351
1 541
1 335
111
125
111
101

158
175
210
127
254
458
355
486
1 119
1 151
863
70
86
112
80

86
70
116
278
195
330
266
362
638
724
497
59
76
62
65

107
107
102
109
142
319
277
337
677
493
391
50
55
63
49

16
5
9

139
103
115

208
172
194

156
133
170

109
115
125

65
53
93

1
1

7
2

13
0

7
0

0
57
110
48
68

1
2
400
789
493
507

0
605
689
553
569

2
256
493
366
322

UNKNOWN

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

93
320
445
0
0
1
0

414
1 651
2 107
1
1
1
8

565
1 959
2 263
1
2
0
15

339
1 302
1 455
2
0
3
7

205
869
1 112
0
1
1
1

99
471
831
1
1
0
1

36
246
488
1
1
0
1

12
23
20
134
55
48
8
234
77
45
54
725
37
44
73
1
0
1
3
0
1
0
4
1
4
1
0
5
6
8

147
123
104
288
457
431
199
1 039
593
394
433
304
338
305
394
15
8
6
14
8
11
13
41
16
31
25
36
34
43
36

156
117
120
367
343
298
352
890
410
205
288
1 208
241
260
294
4
9
6
24
24
24
31
78
18
26
14
48
31
35
36

47
66
89
274
257
205
423
664
322
186
208
915
136
151
198
10
1
6
4
9
12
11
30
13
9
8
17
19
24
35

31
23
36
256
211
218
292
613
320
260
276
800
134
197
205
14
2
5
3
4
5
3
10
8
7
3
7
20
24
21

17
13
24
160
112
132
192
685
407
382
398
886
103
135
220
12
2
8
5
4
3
1
11
5
4
3
4
13
16
21

10
8
19
75
48
42
97
788
647
701
1 014
200
87
80
166
7
5
5
3
2
1
5
8
3
6
1
3
11
22
20

191
170
167
117
2
2
2
3
85
130
1 447
3 212
1
0
0

1 708
1 530
1 330
1 098
18
17
13
18
375
591
6 463
14 481
2
0
5
7

1 288
1 121
943
841
13
5
5
22
381
416
5 611
10 513
3
4
10
16

703
672
546
426
5
7
3
6
267
274
3 987
7 749
1
3
2
2

461
398
403
386
5
5
4
4
178
163
2 866
6 410
0
1
1
1

317
406
343
310
6
11
5
4
143
103
2 060
4 879
0
0
2
1

299
352
398
364
3
6
3
5
79
56
1 338
4 338
1
0
0
0

28
31
33
38
85
169
91
359
817
381
195
22
23
27
16

172
205
239
158
354
752
467
490
925
1 102
761
158
195
182
164

182
184
271
139
319
636
444
613
1 134
1 203
979
97
101
108
105

79
98
105
97
219
436
341
299
905
978
772
53
53
59
47

51
73
70
40
110
292
188
403
771
729
520
44
46
59
41

50
51
49
25
72
212
137
342
327
411
279
37
38
32
38

70
61
58
16
41
157
132
305
323
244
191
20
28
23
27

101
81
88

7
7
4

68
66
64

59
61
64

43
39
39

21
36
34

21
16
40

58
28
52

12

10

16

3
1

4
0

4
3

1
0

2
1

4
0

1
0

5
1

1
0

3
0

1
1
201
314
242
231

3
1
148
255
149
164

3
45
127
78
138

0
83
161
44
98

0
420
799
426
471

1
1
720
627
410
409

0
348
517
265
264

1
1
200
345
181
174

2
106
247
85
106

0
92
92
39
63

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO

0.5
0.5
0.5
1.7
2.8
1.5
1.7

2.3
2.0
1.9
1.9
2.1
1.7
2.0
0.9
0.9
1.1
0.9
1.3
1.6
1.6
1.3
2.1
2.3
1.3
1.1
2.4
2.2
1.9
1.1
2.1
1.3
1.4
0.7
3.7
3.1
3.9

1.9
1.8
2.1
2.5
1.1
1.2
2.7
1.5
0.7
1.0
1.0
1.0
6.5
5.6
3.8
7.3

1.5
1.4
1.8
3.6
2.1
1.7
1.9
1.2
1.4
1.5
1.7
2.1
2.1
1.8
1.6

2.9
2.6
2.7

1.6

2.3
3.5

2.5
2.3
0.9
1.0
1.3
1.3

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Eastern Mediterranean Region

MALE
YEAR

183

184

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

0.2
7.9
0
1.1
3.2
0.6
44
1.8
3.5

2.5
18
0.4
2.8
1.8
0

1.0
5.2

1.2
0.8

1.9
1.4
1.8
0.4
0.5
0.6
2.6
0.4
3.9

0.5
8.9
0.7
<0.1
1.2
0.7
0.9
2.7
0.6

1.6
0.8

0
0.4

0.3
1.8
0.3
2.8
1.8
0
0.1
0.2
2.4

0
4.0
0
<0.1
0.1
0.2
0.8
1.8
1.2

DST LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

LABORATORIES

CULTURE LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes

No
No
No

Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

NRL

No
In country
In country
In and out of cty
No
Out of country
Out of country
In country

Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
In country
In country
In country
No
No
Out of country

SECOND-LINE
DST
AVAILABLE

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
For smear-positive TB

TB DIAGNOSIS

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

FIRST-LINE DRUGS

FREE THROUGH NTP

Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

RIFAMPICIN USED
THROUGHOUT
TREATMENT

100
98
100
100
0
100
10
75
80
0
0
100

100
0
100
80
0
100
95
65
100

% OF PATIENTS
TREATED WITH FDCb

DRUG MANAGEMENT

a NRL = national reference laboratory


b FDC = fixed-dose combination
c NURSES (Registered Nurses, Registered Midwives, Enrolled Nurses, Enrolled Midwives); HEALTH ASSISTANTS (Medical Assistants, Clinical Officers); LABORATORY TECHNICIANS (Microscopists)

Afghanistan
Bahrain
Djibouti
Egypt
Iran (Islamic Republic of)
Iraq
Jordan
Kuwait
Lebanon
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Morocco
Oman
Pakistan
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Somalia
Sudan
Syrian Arab Republic
Tunisia
United Arab Emirates
West Bank and Gaza Strip
Yemen

SMEAR LABS
PER 100K
POPULATION

7$%/($/DERUDWRULHV173VHUYLFHVGUXJPDQDJHPHQWKXPDQUHVRXUFHVDQGLQIHFWLRQFRQWURO

Yes
No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

PAEDIATRIC
FORMULATIONS
PROCURED

0
0

0
0

100
99
100

100
98
100

10
90
70
0

18
100
70
0

50
80
100

100

100

50
100
100

18

NURSES

20

MEDICAL
OFFICERS

0
0

100
98
100

50
80
100

13
90
70
0

100

HEALTH
ASSISTANTS

0
0

100
97
90

50
100
100

25
100
70
0

100

26

LABORATORY
TECHNICIANS

% OF STAFF TRAINED BY THE NTP (IN 2010)c

0
0

66

12

2
0
12
0

TB NOTIFICATION
RATE PER 100 000
HEALTH-CARE
WORKERS

European Region
Table A3.1 Estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB, 19902010

187

Table A3.2 Incidence, notication and case detection rates, all forms, 19902010

191

Table A3.3 Case notications, 19902010

195

Table A3.4 Treatment outcomes, new smear-positive cases, 19952009

199

Table A3.5 Treatment outcomes, retreatment cases, 19952009

202

Table A3.6 HIV testing and provision of CPT, ART and IPT, 20052010

205

Table A3.7 Testing for MDR-TB and number of conrmed cases of MDR-TB, 20052010

207

Table A3.8 New smear-positive case notication by age and sex, 19952010

209

Table A3.9 Laboratories, NTP services, drug management, human resources and
infection control, 2010

211

Estimates of mortality, prevalence and incidence


Estimated values are shown as best estimates followed by lower and upper bounds. The lower and upper bounds are
de ned as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of outcome distributions produced in simulations. See ANNEX 1 for further
details.
Estimated numbers are shown rounded to two signicant gures. Estimated rates are shown rounded to three
signicant gures unless the value is under 100, in which case rates are shown rounded to two signicant gures.
Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are re ned, so they
may differ from those published in previous reports in this series. Estimates published in previous global TB control
reports should no longer be used.

Data source
Data shown in this annex are taken from the WHO global TB database on 2 September 2011. Data shown in the main
part of the report were taken from the database on 21 June 2011. As a result, data in this annex may differ slightly from
those in the main part of the report.
Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data.

Country notes
EU/EEA countries
Notication and treatment outcome data for European Union and European Economic Area countries are provisional.

Denmark
Data for Denmark exclude Greenland.

186

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Albania

Andorra

Armenia

Austria

Azerbaijan

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

Bulgaria

Croatia

Cyprus

Czech Republic

Denmark

Estonia

Finland

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

3
3
3
3
3
3
3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
7
8
8
9
9
9
9
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
4
3
4
4
4
4
4
9
8
8
8
8
8
7
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
<1
<1
<1
1
1
1
1
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
5
5
5
5
5
6
6
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
5
5
5
5
5
5
5

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.038
0.027
0.024
0.023
0.019
0.016
0.012
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.2
0.23
0.32
0.21
0.28
0.31
0.33
0.097
0.087
0.096
0.052
0.044
0.042
0.022
1.3
1.5
1.1
1
0.99
0.96
0.94
2.3
1.8
0.85
1.1
1.1
1.1
1
0.11
0.09
0.083
0.067
0.051
0.052
0.052
0.21
0.3
0.12
0.094
0.088
0.12
0.11
0.68
0.23
0.33
0.28
0.23
0.3
0.31
0.32
0.27
0.18
0.11
0.11
0.13
0.1
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.15
0.14
0.13
0.069
0.053
0.051
0.045
0.019
0.026
0.021
0.02
0.018
0.016
0.016
0.066
0.1
0.11
0.051
0.048
0.044
0.039
0.081
0.071
0.084
0.038
0.027
0.025
0.036

(0.0190.074)
(0.0170.045)
(0.0160.04)
(0.0140.038)
(0.0120.031)
(0.010.026)
(<0.010.021)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0830.38)
(0.150.33)
(0.210.47)
(0.120.35)
(0.170.43)
(0.20.45)
(0.220.47)
(0.0840.12)
(0.0750.11)
(0.0960.096)
(0.0520.053)
(0.0440.045)
(0.0420.042)
(0.020.026)
(0.662.1)
(1.11.8)
(0.741.5)
(0.691.5)
(0.641.4)
(0.621.4)
(0.611.4)
(1.13.9)
(1.22.5)
(0.850.85)
(0.651.7)
(0.631.7)
(0.631.7)
(0.61.6)
(0.0920.13)
(0.0780.11)
(0.0710.1)
(0.0670.067)
(0.0450.06)
(0.0440.062)
(0.0450.063)
(0.140.57)
(0.190.46)
(0.0970.14)
(0.0760.11)
(0.0710.11)
(0.0790.19)
(0.0760.18)
(0.281.3)
(0.190.28)
(0.330.34)
(0.280.28)
(0.230.23)
(0.20.47)
(0.210.47)
(0.270.38)
(0.230.32)
(0.180.18)
(0.110.11)
(0.110.11)
(0.120.13)
(0.0870.12)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.130.18)
(0.120.17)
(0.130.13)
(0.0690.069)
(0.0530.053)
(0.0510.051)
(0.040.054)
(0.0170.023)
(0.0230.031)
(0.0210.021)
(0.020.02)
(0.0150.021)
(0.0140.019)
(0.0140.019)
(0.0570.079)
(0.0870.12)
(0.110.11)
(0.0510.051)
(0.0480.048)
(0.0440.044)
(0.0360.046)
(0.070.097)
(0.0610.084)
(0.0840.085)
(0.0380.038)
(0.0270.027)
(0.0250.025)
(0.0330.039)

RATEa

1.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3.8
2.5
1.5
<1
<1
<1
<1
5.6
7.1
10
6.8
9.2
10
11
1.3
1.1
1.2
<1
<1
<1
<1
17
19
13
12
11
11
10
22
17
8.5
11
11
11
11
1.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
5
9
3.2
2.5
2.3
3.2
3
7.7
2.8
4.2
3.6
3.1
4
4.2
7
5.7
3.9
2.6
2.4
2.8
2.3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.4
1.4
1.2
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4.2
7
8.1
3.8
3.6
3.3
2.9
1.6
1.4
1.6
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<12.2)
(<11.4)
(<11.3)
(<11.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(3.34.5)
(2.22.9)
(1.31.9)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(2.411)
(4.710)
(6.915)
(412)
(5.614)
(6.415)
(715)
(1.11.5)
(<11.3)
(1.21.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(9.129)
(1424)
(9.118)
(8.117)
(7.216)
(6.815)
(6.615)
(1138)
(1224)
(8.48.5)
(6.618)
(6.617)
(6.618)
(6.317)
(<11.3)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(3.413)
(5.614)
(2.63.9)
(23)
(1.92.8)
(2.15.2)
(24.9)
(3.215)
(2.23.4)
(4.24.2)
(3.63.6)
(3.13.1)
(2.66.2)
(2.86.2)
(68.4)
(4.96.8)
(3.93.9)
(2.62.6)
(2.42.4)
(2.82.9)
(22.8)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.21.7)
(1.21.6)
(1.21.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(3.65)
(6.18.4)
(8.18.2)
(3.83.8)
(3.63.6)
(3.33.3)
(2.73.4)
(1.42)
(1.21.7)
(1.61.6)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

1.1
0.94
0.85
0.75
0.63
0.56
0.51
0.032
0.024
0.017
0.011
0.011
<0.01
<0.01
2
2.4
3.4
2.9
3.3
3.4
3.5
2.2
2
1.7
1.3
0.99
0.76
0.48
16
18
15
15
15
15
15
16
14
9.4
10
9.8
9.8
9.4
2.4
1.9
1.9
1.5
1.1
1.1
1.1
4.7
4.3
2.9
2.3
2.1
2.3
2.2
6.7
4.3
4.2
4.5
4.1
4
4
4
3.1
2.4
1.5
1.4
1.2
1.2
0.054
0.061
0.05
0.057
0.055
0.058
0.061
2.9
2.8
2.1
1.4
1.1
1
0.88
0.51
0.67
0.84
0.55
0.47
0.42
0.41
0.61
0.94
1.1
0.67
0.55
0.5
0.35
1.1
1
0.79
0.53
0.42
0.94
0.45

(0.352.1)
(0.271.7)
(0.251.5)
(0.251.3)
(0.21.1)
(0.160.99)
(0.120.89)
(0.010.056)
(<0.010.042)
(<0.010.028)
(<0.010.019)
(<0.010.017)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.015)
(0.714)
(14.1)
(1.55.8)
(0.925)
(1.35.6)
(1.45.7)
(1.55.9)
(0.773.8)
(0.663.4)
(0.62.8)
(0.462.2)
(0.331.7)
(0.271.3)
(0.140.83)
(6.531)
(8.330)
(6.925)
(6.826)
(6.626)
(6.426)
(6.326)
(6.331)
(623)
(316)
(3.817)
(3.717)
(3.817)
(3.616)
(0.874)
(0.623.3)
(0.693.1)
(0.522.6)
(0.331.9)
(0.391.9)
(0.391.9)
(0.999.1)
(1.77.3)
(0.645.1)
(0.514.1)
(0.483.8)
(0.694)
(0.643.9)
(2.314)
(0.967.6)
(17.3)
(1.47.7)
(1.37.1)
(1.46.9)
(1.46.8)
(1.56.6)
(15.4)
(0.84)
(0.52.7)
(0.492.4)
(0.42.1)
(0.392)
(0.0190.09)
(0.0240.1)
(0.0150.085)
(0.0220.094)
(0.0160.095)
(0.0170.1)
(0.0190.1)
(0.955)
(0.944.8)
(0.733.6)
(0.452.4)
(0.41.9)
(0.331.7)
(0.271.5)
(0.170.86)
(0.221.2)
(0.291.4)
(0.20.94)
(0.160.8)
(0.140.72)
(0.140.7)
(0.21)
(0.311.6)
(0.41.9)
(0.231.1)
(0.190.93)
(0.180.84)
(0.0960.61)
(0.391.9)
(0.381.7)
(0.281.3)
(0.210.88)
(0.0950.74)
(0.421.5)
(0.10.8)

RATE

34
30
28
24
20
18
16
62
38
26
14
13
9.9
9.8
56
75
112
93
106
111
114
29
25
21
16
12
9
5.8
222
232
189
180
173
169
166
154
134
94
102
101
101
98
24
19
18
15
10
11
11
108
128
78
60
56
61
60
76
51
52
58
54
54
54
87
67
52
35
32
28
27
7
7.1
5.3
5.5
5.1
5.3
5.5
28
27
21
14
11
9.6
8.4
9.9
13
16
10
8.6
7.7
7.4
39
65
82
50
41
37
26
23
20
15
10
7.9
18
8.5

(1164)
(8.753)
(8.149)
(7.842)
(6.335)
(531)
(3.828)
(19106)
(966)
(8.944)
(324)
(5.521)
(2.817)
(2.217)
(20114)
(32126)
(48187)
(30164)
(42182)
(46186)
(48189)
(1049)
(8.343)
(7.536)
(5.627)
(3.920)
(3.215)
(1.79.9)
(90430)
(107380)
(85313)
(79301)
(74292)
(70284)
(69279)
(61301)
(59223)
(30162)
(39177)
(38175)
(40175)
(38170)
(8.740)
(6.233)
(6.831)
(525)
(3.217)
(3.618)
(3.718)
(23211)
(52219)
(17139)
(14108)
(13100)
(18106)
(17104)
(26155)
(1191)
(1391)
(1999)
(1793)
(1891)
(1991)
(33146)
(22115)
(1889)
(1160)
(1154)
(9.248)
(8.846)
(2.512)
(2.812)
(1.69)
(2.19.1)
(1.58.8)
(1.69.1)
(1.79.4)
(9.348)
(9.146)
(7.135)
(4.523)
(3.819)
(3.216)
(2.614)
(3.317)
(4.322)
(5.527)
(3.617)
(315)
(2.513)
(2.513)
(1367)
(22111)
(29138)
(1784)
(1470)
(1462)
(7.145)
(7.739)
(7.533)
(5.326)
(3.917)
(1.814)
(7.928)
(1.915)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.8
0.77
0.7
0.59
0.5
0.47
0.45
0.026
0.021
0.013
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
1.2
1.5
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.3
1.7
1.6
1.3
1
0.79
0.61
0.42
7.9
8.5
8.9
9.4
9.8
9.9
10
8.2
8.3
7.5
7
6.9
6.9
6.8
1.8
1.6
1.5
1.2
0.93
0.93
0.93
4
2.8
2.3
2
1.9
1.9
1.9
4.1
3.9
3.7
3.5
3.2
3.1
3
2.9
2.5
1.8
1.2
1.1
0.99
0.94
0.041
0.042
0.041
0.041
0.045
0.047
0.049
2.3
2.2
1.7
1.1
0.88
0.79
0.71
0.39
0.54
0.65
0.43
0.38
0.35
0.33
0.47
0.74
0.88
0.55
0.47
0.41
0.33
0.89
0.76
0.61
0.39
0.38
0.6
0.36

(0.571.1)
(0.640.91)
(0.590.81)
(0.50.69)
(0.420.58)
(0.40.55)
(0.380.52)
(0.0230.029)
(0.0180.024)
(0.0110.014)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.711.7)
(1.21.8)
(1.82.6)
(1.82.7)
(1.82.7)
(1.82.7)
(1.92.7)
(1.51.9)
(1.31.8)
(1.11.5)
(0.911.2)
(0.680.91)
(0.550.68)
(0.370.48)
(4.812)
(6.910)
(7.211)
(7.711)
(812)
(8.112)
(8.312)
(512)
(6.710)
(6.48.6)
(5.78.5)
(5.68.4)
(5.58.4)
(5.58.2)
(1.62.1)
(1.41.8)
(1.31.7)
(1.11.4)
(0.821.1)
(0.811)
(0.821.1)
(2.56)
(2.33.4)
(1.92.8)
(1.62.4)
(1.62.2)
(1.62.2)
(1.62.2)
(2.56)
(3.24.6)
(3.24.2)
(3.14.1)
(2.83.7)
(2.73.6)
(2.63.5)
(2.53.3)
(2.22.8)
(1.62.1)
(1.11.4)
(0.941.2)
(0.881.1)
(0.831.1)
(0.0370.046)
(0.0370.048)
(0.0360.046)
(0.0360.046)
(0.0390.052)
(0.0410.054)
(0.0420.055)
(22.6)
(1.92.5)
(1.51.9)
(0.971.3)
(0.761)
(0.70.89)
(0.620.81)
(0.340.45)
(0.480.61)
(0.570.74)
(0.370.49)
(0.330.43)
(0.310.39)
(0.290.38)
(0.410.54)
(0.650.83)
(0.771)
(0.480.62)
(0.410.53)
(0.360.46)
(0.290.37)
(0.781)
(0.670.86)
(0.530.69)
(0.340.44)
(0.330.43)
(0.520.68)
(0.310.41)

RATE

24
24
23
19
16
15
14
49
33
19
12
9
8.2
7.4
33
47
71
72
73
73
73
22
20
16
13
9.5
7.3
5
110
110
110
110
110
110
110
80
81
74
72
72
71
70
18
16
14
12
8.8
8.7
8.7
94
84
63
52
51
50
50
46
46
46
46
43
41
40
64
53
41
28
24
23
21
5.4
5
4.3
4
4.2
4.3
4.4
22
21
16
11
8.4
7.6
6.8
7.7
10
12
7.9
6.8
6.3
6
30
51
64
41
35
30
25
18
15
12
7.4
7.2
11
6.7

(1733)
(2029)
(1926)
(1622)
(1318)
(1217)
(1216)
(4356)
(2838)
(1722)
(1014)
(8.39.8)
(6.99.7)
(6.28.7)
(2049)
(3856)
(5785)
(5887)
(5987)
(6087)
(6087)
(2025)
(1722)
(1418)
(1114)
(8.111)
(6.68.1)
(4.45.7)
(67163)
(89132)
(89132)
(89132)
(89132)
(90132)
(90131)
(49119)
(6697)
(6485)
(5887)
(5887)
(5787)
(5785)
(1621)
(1418)
(1316)
(1013)
(7.710)
(7.69.8)
(7.69.8)
(57139)
(69102)
(5176)
(4263)
(4358)
(4358)
(4257)
(2868)
(3854)
(4053)
(4053)
(3749)
(3647)
(3546)
(5673)
(4760)
(3646)
(2431)
(2128)
(2025)
(1924)
(4.96)
(4.45.6)
(3.84.9)
(3.54.5)
(3.74.8)
(3.74.9)
(3.85)
(2025)
(1924)
(1418)
(9.512)
(7.39.6)
(6.78.5)
(5.97.7)
(6.78.7)
(9.112)
(1114)
(6.89)
(67.7)
(5.67.1)
(5.36.8)
(2634)
(4558)
(5673)
(3646)
(3039)
(2735)
(2228)
(1620)
(1317)
(1013)
(6.58.4)
(6.38.1)
(9.813)
(5.97.6)

European Region

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

187

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%
MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)

France

Georgia

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

Ireland

Israel

Italy

Kazakhstan

Kyrgyzstan

Latvia

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Malta

188

YEAR

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

57
58
59
61
62
62
63
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
79
82
82
83
82
82
82
10
11
11
11
11
11
11
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
6
7
7
7
7
57
57
57
59
60
60
61
17
16
15
15
16
16
16
4
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
4
4
4
3
3
3
3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.88
0.84
0.69
0.46
0.38
0.46
0.45
1.1
0.78
0.3
0.28
0.24
0.21
0.2
0.89
0.73
0.51
0.33
0.21
0.22
0.2
0.15
0.17
0.092
0.098
0.086
0.094
0.081
0.36
0.44
0.36
0.19
0.12
0.12
0.13
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.046
0.034
0.036
0.016
0.018
0.024
0.022
0.019
0.025
0.037
0.024
0.015
0.019
0.017
0.45
0.51
0.47
0.38
0.34
0.29
0.26
6.8
6
5.4
4.6
3.5
2.8
3.6
1.6
1.4
0.82
1.1
0.84
0.79
1.4
0.82
0.53
0.32
0.19
0.12
0.1
0.074
1.1
0.69
0.39
0.38
0.36
0.28
0.37
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(0.790.98)
(0.760.94)
(0.680.69)
(0.460.46)
(0.380.38)
(0.410.51)
(0.40.5)
(0.61.7)
(0.561)
(0.30.3)
(0.190.43)
(0.170.36)
(0.160.32)
(0.160.24)
(0.761.1)
(0.630.88)
(0.510.51)
(0.330.33)
(0.190.25)
(0.190.26)
(0.180.24)
(0.130.18)
(0.140.2)
(0.0910.092)
(0.0980.098)
(0.0860.086)
(0.0940.094)
(0.070.097)
(0.310.44)
(0.380.54)
(0.360.36)
(0.190.19)
(0.120.12)
(0.120.12)
(0.120.16)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.040.055)
(0.0290.041)
(0.0360.036)
(0.0160.016)
(0.0180.018)
(0.0240.024)
(0.0190.026)
(0.0170.022)
(0.0210.029)
(0.0370.037)
(0.0240.024)
(0.0150.015)
(0.0160.023)
(0.0150.02)
(0.380.54)
(0.440.61)
(0.470.47)
(0.330.45)
(0.340.34)
(0.250.35)
(0.230.32)
(3.212)
(4.28.2)
(5.45.4)
(4.64.6)
(3.53.5)
(2.82.8)
(2.25.8)
(0.82.7)
(0.991.9)
(0.51.4)
(1.11.1)
(0.830.84)
(0.780.79)
(0.912)
(0.411.4)
(0.360.76)
(0.320.32)
(0.190.19)
(0.120.12)
(0.10.1)
(0.0590.089)
(0.511.8)
(0.431)
(0.390.4)
(0.380.38)
(0.360.36)
(0.280.28)
(0.240.56)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

RATEa

1.5
1.5
1.2
<1
<1
<1
<1
20
15
6.4
6.3
5.4
4.8
4.6
1.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.5
1.6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3.5
4.3
3.5
1.9
1.2
1.2
1.3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
41
38
36
30
22
18
23
36
30
17
21
16
15
26
31
21
13
8.2
5.2
4.4
3.3
29
19
11
11
11
8.3
11
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(1.41.7)
(1.31.6)
(1.21.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1132)
(1120)
(6.36.4)
(4.39.7)
(3.98.1)
(3.77.2)
(3.75.6)
(<11.3)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.31.8)
(1.31.9)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(34.2)
(3.75.2)
(3.53.6)
(1.91.9)
(1.21.2)
(1.21.2)
(1.21.6)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.11.6)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1973)
(2652)
(3636)
(3030)
(2222)
(1818)
(1436)
(1862)
(2241)
(1028)
(2121)
(1616)
(1515)
(1738)
(1652)
(1431)
(1313)
(8.28.2)
(5.25.2)
(4.44.5)
(2.64)
(1450)
(1229)
(1111)
(1111)
(1111)
(8.38.3)
(7.117)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

15
15
10
7.9
8.6
7.8
7.7
12
9.9
6.5
5.8
5.3
5.2
5.1
22
18
14
8.1
4.9
5.4
4.8
1.3
1.3
1.1
0.91
0.77
0.7
0.65
5.2
6.4
4.3
2.5
2.1
1.9
1.9
0.024
0.018
0.014
0.012
0.02
0.017
0.017
0.93
0.69
0.58
0.57
0.52
0.49
0.43
0.48
0.7
0.66
0.65
0.53
0.52
0.41
6.4
6.7
6.7
4.9
4.6
4
3.6
42
38
37
46
36
35
32
12
12
9.7
11
12
12
13
4.8
3.7
2.7
2
1.4
1.2
0.97
6.4
5.1
3.8
3.3
3.1
3.1
3.1
0.052
0.06
0.057
0.059
0.053
0.053
0.052
0.024
0.028
0.023
0.032
0.056
0.058
0.062

(6.424)
(6.223)
(4.216)
(3.213)
(3.614)
(3.213)
(3.212)
(524)
(4.516)
(2.111)
(1.89.9)
(1.49.3)
(1.29)
(1.29.1)
(8.237)
(5.830)
(523)
(2.714)
(1.48.5)
(1.99.1)
(1.58.3)
(0.452.1)
(0.452.3)
(0.381.8)
(0.311.5)
(0.261.3)
(0.241.2)
(0.211.1)
(1.78.9)
(2.211)
(1.47.4)
(0.744.3)
(0.73.6)
(0.593.2)
(0.643.3)
(<0.010.041)
(<0.010.031)
(<0.010.025)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.010.038)
(<0.010.029)
(<0.010.029)
(0.311.6)
(0.231.2)
(0.190.99)
(0.20.96)
(0.180.88)
(0.170.83)
(0.140.74)
(0.150.81)
(0.291.1)
(0.21.1)
(0.261.1)
(0.190.88)
(0.20.86)
(0.110.71)
(2.411)
(2.112)
(2.711)
(1.58.5)
(1.87.7)
(1.46.7)
(1.36.2)
(1683)
(1764)
(1265)
(1780)
(1263)
(1260)
(1155)
(4.824)
(5.319)
(3.117)
(4.219)
(4.720)
(4.921)
(5.522)
(1.99.4)
(1.66.2)
(0.864.6)
(0.633.3)
(0.442.3)
(0.352)
(0.251.7)
(2.513)
(28.6)
(1.26.5)
(1.15.7)
(15.3)
(1.15.3)
(1.15.3)
(0.0120.093)
(0.0230.098)
(0.020.098)
(0.0240.098)
(0.0170.091)
(0.0160.09)
(0.0150.089)
(<0.010.04)
(<0.010.046)
(<0.010.04)
(0.0110.056)
(0.0180.099)
(0.0190.1)
(0.0220.11)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATE

27
25
17
13
14
13
12
227
194
137
129
122
118
118
28
22
17
9.8
5.9
6.6
5.9
12
13
9.8
8.2
6.9
6.2
5.7
50
62
43
25
21
19
19
9.3
6.6
5
4
6.3
5.4
5.2
26
19
15
14
12
11
9.7
11
13
11
9.8
7.4
7.1
5.6
11
12
12
8.4
7.7
6.6
6
255
242
250
304
232
221
198
280
252
195
223
230
234
243
182
149
113
85
60
51
43
173
139
107
97
92
93
94
14
15
13
13
11
11
10
6.4
7.2
5.9
7.9
14
14
15

(1143)
(1140)
(7.127)
(5.321)
(5.822)
(5.120)
(5.120)
(92434)
(89318)
(44237)
(39221)
(32211)
(28207)
(27209)
(1047)
(7.137)
(6.128)
(3.317)
(1.710)
(2.311)
(1.910)
(4.421)
(4.222)
(3.516)
(2.814)
(2.312)
(2.111)
(1.99.8)
(1685)
(21105)
(1373)
(7.443)
(736)
(5.932)
(6.433)
(3.116)
(2.111)
(1.48.9)
(<17.7)
(2.312)
(1.99.2)
(1.49.2)
(8.845)
(6.432)
(5.126)
(4.723)
(420)
(3.919)
(317)
(3.318)
(5.421)
(3.319)
(3.916)
(2.712)
(2.712)
(1.59.6)
(4.319)
(3.620)
(4.819)
(2.514)
(2.913)
(2.311)
(2.110)
(98503)
(109399)
(80433)
(113527)
(79404)
(78378)
(68341)
(110547)
(115416)
(63341)
(83387)
(90393)
(94398)
(103407)
(73352)
(65249)
(36195)
(28145)
(19103)
(1588)
(1175)
(67339)
(56238)
(34186)
(33166)
(30158)
(33159)
(34159)
(3.124)
(5.724)
(4.722)
(5.221)
(3.519)
(3.218)
(2.918)
(1.811)
(2.412)
(210)
(2.714)
(4.424)
(4.624)
(5.226)

11
11
7.6
6.1
6.4
6
5.9
5.8
5.4
5.1
4.8
4.7
4.7
4.6
17
14
10
6.4
4.2
4.2
4
0.97
1.1
0.84
0.72
0.61
0.56
0.52
4.1
5
3.5
2.1
1.6
1.5
1.5
0.019
0.015
0.012
0.012
0.014
0.015
0.016
0.73
0.55
0.47
0.45
0.42
0.39
0.36
0.39
0.5
0.56
0.49
0.42
0.39
0.37
4.9
5.7
5.1
4.3
3.5
3.2
2.9
23
22
29
33
27
26
24
6.3
6.5
7.5
8
8.3
8.4
8.5
2.5
2.3
2.2
1.6
1.2
1
0.89
3.4
3.4
3
2.5
2.4
2.3
2.3
0.044
0.044
0.044
0.043
0.044
0.045
0.045
0.02
0.024
0.02
0.027
0.048
0.05
0.05

(1112)
(1011)
(7.18)
(5.76.4)
(66.8)
(5.66.4)
(5.56.2)
(3.58.7)
(4.46.5)
(4.35.9)
(4.25.4)
(4.25.2)
(4.15.2)
(4.15.2)
(1519)
(1216)
(9.112)
(5.67.2)
(3.74.8)
(3.74.8)
(3.54.5)
(0.851.1)
(0.941.2)
(0.740.94)
(0.630.82)
(0.540.69)
(0.490.63)
(0.460.6)
(3.64.7)
(4.45.6)
(3.14)
(1.82.4)
(1.41.9)
(1.31.7)
(1.31.7)
(0.0160.022)
(0.0140.017)
(0.0110.014)
(0.0110.014)
(0.0130.015)
(0.0130.017)
(0.0130.02)
(0.640.82)
(0.480.62)
(0.410.53)
(0.40.51)
(0.370.47)
(0.340.44)
(0.320.41)
(0.360.43)
(0.450.56)
(0.490.64)
(0.430.54)
(0.370.47)
(0.340.45)
(0.320.42)
(4.35.5)
(4.96.5)
(4.65.6)
(3.74.9)
(3.14.1)
(2.93.6)
(2.63.3)
(1434)
(1827)
(2534)
(2739)
(2332)
(2230)
(2028)
(3.89.3)
(5.37.9)
(6.28.9)
(6.59.6)
(6.710)
(6.910)
(710)
(1.53.7)
(1.92.8)
(1.92.6)
(1.41.8)
(11.3)
(0.891.2)
(0.781)
(2.15.1)
(2.74)
(2.63.5)
(2.22.9)
(22.8)
(22.7)
(22.7)
(0.0370.051)
(0.0390.049)
(0.0380.051)
(0.0380.049)
(0.0390.05)
(0.0390.051)
(0.0390.051)
(0.0180.022)
(0.0220.025)
(0.0180.022)
(0.0240.03)
(0.0410.055)
(0.0440.056)
(0.0440.056)

RATE

20
19
13
9.9
10
9.6
9.3
107
107
107
107
107
107
107
21
17
13
7.7
5.1
5.1
4.8
9.6
10
7.6
6.4
5.4
4.9
4.6
40
48
35
21
16
15
15
7.4
5.7
4.4
4.1
4.5
4.8
5
21
15
12
11
9.6
8.8
8.1
8.7
9.5
9.4
7.4
5.9
5.4
4.9
8.6
10
8.9
7.3
5.9
5.4
4.9
139
139
196
215
175
163
151
143
143
151
158
159
159
159
92
93
92
69
51
45
39
92
92
86
74
71
70
69
11
11
10
9.5
9.1
9
8.8
5.5
6.1
5
6.5
11
12
12

(1921)
(1820)
(1214)
(9.311)
(9.711)
(910)
(8.89.9)
(65158)
(87128)
(90125)
(94120)
(94119)
(95119)
(95119)
(1924)
(1519)
(1114)
(6.88.7)
(4.55.8)
(4.55.8)
(4.25.4)
(8.311)
(8.811)
(6.78.6)
(5.67.3)
(4.76.1)
(4.45.6)
(45.2)
(3545)
(4255)
(3039)
(1823)
(1419)
(1317)
(1317)
(6.48.5)
(5.16.4)
(3.85.1)
(3.64.6)
(4.24.8)
(4.35.3)
(4.16.1)
(1823)
(1317)
(1114)
(9.612)
(8.511)
(7.79.9)
(7.19.2)
(89.5)
(8.411)
(8.111)
(6.68.2)
(5.26.6)
(4.76.1)
(4.35.6)
(7.59.7)
(8.611)
(89.8)
(6.48.3)
(5.16.8)
(4.86)
(4.35.5)
(84206)
(113167)
(167228)
(175259)
(146206)
(137192)
(127177)
(87212)
(116172)
(125179)
(129191)
(129192)
(130191)
(131191)
(56137)
(76112)
(79107)
(6079)
(4558)
(4051)
(3445)
(56137)
(75111)
(7499)
(6485)
(6182)
(6081)
(5980)
(9.713)
(9.712)
(8.712)
(8.311)
(7.910)
(7.810)
(7.710)
(56.1)
(5.76.5)
(4.45.6)
(5.77.3)
(9.813)
(1113)
(1113)

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Monaco

Montenegro

Netherlands

Norway

Poland

Portugal

Republic of
Moldova

Romania

Russian
Federation

San Marino

Serbia

Serbia &
Montenegro
Slovakia

Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
15
15
16
16
17
17
17
4
4
4
5
5
5
5
38
38
38
38
38
38
38
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
23
23
22
22
22
22
21
148
149
147
144
143
143
143
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
39
39
40
43
45
46
46
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
7
7
7
7
8
8
8

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATEa

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)
<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)
<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

<1 (<1<1)
<1 (<1<1)
<1 (<1<1)

0.011
0.011
0.012
<0.01
0.041
0.051
0.034
0.034
0.026
0.038
0.031
0.01
<0.01
0.01
0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
1.7
1.6
1.1
0.87
0.87
0.79
0.78
0.45
0.37
0.3
0.19
0.16
0.16
0.16
1
0.75
0.84
0.8
0.68
0.7
0.83
3
2
2.2
1.8
1.6
1.5
1.5
68
51
33
34
27
25
26
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.010.021)
(<0.010.019)
(<0.010.018)
(<0.010.014)
(0.0350.049)
(0.0440.061)
(0.0340.034)
(0.0340.035)
(0.0260.026)
(0.0380.039)
(0.0270.037)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.010.011)
(0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(1.42)
(1.42)
(1.11.1)
(0.860.87)
(0.870.87)
(0.790.8)
(0.670.94)
(0.380.54)
(0.310.46)
(0.30.3)
(0.160.23)
(0.160.16)
(0.160.16)
(0.130.2)
(0.511.7)
(0.521)
(0.840.85)
(0.790.8)
(0.670.68)
(0.70.7)
(0.551.2)
(1.45.5)
(1.33.1)
(2.22.2)
(1.81.8)
(1.61.7)
(1.51.5)
(1.51.5)
(36110)
(3570)
(3333)
(3434)
(2727)
(2525)
(1642)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

1.8
1.8
1.9
1.4
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4.4
4.3
2.9
2.3
2.3
2.1
2
4.5
3.7
2.9
1.8
1.5
1.5
1.5
23
17
21
21
19
19
23
13
9
9.8
8.2
7.6
7.1
7
46
34
22
23
19
17
18
<1
<1
<1
<1

(1.33.3)
(1.23.1)
(1.22.9)
(<12.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(3.85.3)
(3.75.2)
(2.92.9)
(2.32.3)
(2.32.3)
(2.12.1)
(1.82.4)
(3.85.4)
(3.14.5)
(2.92.9)
(1.62.2)
(1.51.5)
(1.51.5)
(1.21.9)
(1239)
(1224)
(2021)
(2121)
(1919)
(1919)
(1533)
(624)
(5.614)
(9.79.8)
(8.28.2)
(7.67.7)
(7.17.1)
(77)
(2475)
(2447)
(2222)
(2324)
(1919)
(1717)
(1129)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

0.29
0.17
0.17
0.14
0.49
0.49
0.34
0.099
0.11
0.055
0.048
0.043
0.043
0.026
0.063
0.044
0.018
0.017
0.029
0.024
0.016
0.39
0.45
0.41
0.36
0.26
0.34
0.32
0.027
0.026
0.019
0.015
0.018
0.019
0.026
0.057
0.036
0.034
0.022
0.02
0.021
0.021

(0.290.29)
(0.170.17)
(0.170.17)
(0.0940.22)
(0.350.75)
(0.380.63)
(0.270.44)
(0.0870.12)
(0.0950.13)
(0.0550.055)
(0.0480.049)
(0.0430.043)
(0.0430.043)
(0.0230.03)
(0.0540.075)
(0.0380.053)
(0.0180.018)
(0.0170.018)
(0.0290.029)
(0.0240.024)
(0.0140.019)
(0.340.45)
(0.380.55)
(0.410.41)
(0.360.36)
(0.260.27)
(0.290.42)
(0.270.39)
(0.0230.032)
(0.0230.032)
(0.0190.019)
(0.0150.016)
(0.0180.018)
(0.0190.019)
(0.0230.032)
(0.0480.068)
(0.0310.043)
(0.0340.034)
(0.0220.022)
(0.0170.024)
(0.0180.026)
(0.0180.026)

3
1.8
1.7
1.4
4.8
4.5
3.2
1.9
2
1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3.3
2.3
<1
<1
1.5
1.2
<1
<1
1.1
1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(2.93)
(1.81.8)
(1.71.7)
(<12.3)
(3.47.4)
(3.55.8)
(2.54.1)
(1.72.2)
(1.82.5)
(11)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(2.83.9)
(22.7)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.51.5)
(1.21.2)
(<1<1)
(<11.2)
(<11.4)
(11)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.19
0.17
0.17
0.14
1.9
2.4
1.9
1.6
1.4
1.5
1.5
0.44
0.34
0.36
0.41
0.39
0.39
0.37
24
24
16
12
11
11
11
9
7.7
5.4
4.1
3.7
3.4
3.4
9.8
8.3
9.4
8.5
9.1
9.6
9.9
61
49
54
52
41
38
34
330
270
250
210
200
190
190
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
4
4.1
2.4
2.2
9
9.6
6
2.1
2.4
1.5
1.1
0.7
0.63
0.52
0.45
0.16
0.1
0.17
0.31
0.26
0.28
9.6
12
11
10
9
9.1
8.4
0.82
0.82
0.61
0.8
0.65
0.74
0.83
2
1.2
0.76
0.74
0.66
0.73
0.72

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0470.35)
(0.0480.31)
(0.0540.29)
(0.0410.25)
(0.633.3)
(0.84.1)
(0.633.2)
(0.542.8)
(0.462.4)
(0.492.5)
(0.52.5)
(0.160.74)
(0.120.58)
(0.120.6)
(0.140.69)
(0.140.66)
(0.140.65)
(0.120.63)
(7.840)
(840)
(5.227)
(420)
(3.618)
(3.819)
(3.719)
(3.215)
(2.813)
(1.89.2)
(1.56.7)
(1.46.3)
(1.25.9)
(1.25.9)
(3.919)
(3.714)
(4.316)
(315)
(3.816)
(4.116)
(4.316)
(23120)
(2083)
(2192)
(2088)
(1670)
(1566)
(1259)
(130620)
(120460)
(97440)
(75360)
(68340)
(71330)
(70330)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(1.16.9)
(1.56.8)
(0.644.2)
(0.673.8)
(318)
(4.216)
(2.110)
(0.633.6)
(0.784)
(0.522.6)
(0.421.9)
(0.21.2)
(0.191.1)
(0.150.91)
(0.150.93)
(0.0280.45)
(0.0150.29)
(0.0560.35)
(0.110.53)
(0.080.45)
(0.0910.47)
(2.917)
(4.520)
(4.119)
(3.817)
(3.115)
(3.315)
(2.814)
(0.291.4)
(0.291.4)
(0.21)
(0.31.3)
(0.21.1)
(0.251.3)
(0.31.4)
(0.743.2)
(0.432)
(0.221.3)
(0.261.2)
(0.231.1)
(0.261.2)
(0.251.2)

RATE

7
5.9
3.2
<1
<1
<1
<1
31
27
27
23
13
16
12
9.9
8.5
8.9
9
10
7.9
7.9
8.9
8.2
8
7.5
62
61
41
31
28
29
29
91
76
52
39
35
32
32
224
191
229
226
251
267
277
261
215
242
237
191
177
159
220
185
174
144
137
136
136
6.1
15
8.9
<1
<1
<1
<1
40
41
25
22
89
89
56
39
44
28
21
13
11
9.6
23
8.3
5
8.5
16
13
14
25
31
28
23
20
20
18
9.6
9.3
6.9
8.8
7
8
8.8
29
17
11
9.9
8.7
9.5
9.4

(3.311)
(2.79.3)
(<15.6)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(7.555)
(7.749)
(8.646)
(6.539)
(4.222)
(5.227)
(3.920)
(3.317)
(2.814)
(315)
(315)
(3.718)
(2.813)
(2.813)
(3.115)
(2.914)
(2.813)
(2.513)
(20105)
(21104)
(1371)
(1053)
(9.348)
(9.949)
(9.849)
(33154)
(28129)
(1889)
(1464)
(1359)
(1155)
(1255)
(90435)
(85317)
(104378)
(81391)
(104427)
(114448)
(121459)
(101517)
(86365)
(95413)
(93405)
(74326)
(68304)
(58275)
(89420)
(82306)
(66300)
(52250)
(48239)
(50232)
(49233)
(2.111)
(6.924)
(4.214)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1170)
(1569)
(6.543)
(6.838)
(29176)
(39149)
(2097)
(1268)
(1575)
(9.548)
(7.734)
(3.722)
(3.520)
(2.717)
(7.648)
(1.423)
(<115)
(2.818)
(5.526)
(422)
(4.523)
(7.343)
(1152)
(1046)
(8.939)
(6.933)
(7.234)
(6.231)
(3.416)
(3.316)
(2.312)
(3.315)
(2.212)
(2.714)
(3.215)
(1149)
(6.129)
(3.118)
(3.417)
(315)
(3.416)
(3.316)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATE

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)
<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)
<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

3.7 (3.24.2)
3.5 (33.9)
<1 (<1<1)

0.17
0.14
0.13
0.12
1.5
1.9
1.5
1.3
1.1
1.2
1.2
0.34
0.27
0.28
0.32
0.31
0.3
0.3
19
18
13
9.5
8.7
8.7
8.8
7.1
6.4
4.9
3.8
3.2
3.1
3.1
5
4.9
5.6
6.2
6.3
6.4
6.5
33
33
37
36
29
27
25
160
160
180
150
150
150
150
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(0.160.2)
(0.130.17)
(0.120.15)
(0.10.14)
(1.31.7)
(1.72.2)
(1.41.7)
(1.11.5)
(11.3)
(11.4)
(1.11.4)
(0.30.38)
(0.240.3)
(0.250.31)
(0.280.36)
(0.270.35)
(0.260.34)
(0.260.33)
(1621)
(1621)
(1114)
(8.311)
(7.69.8)
(7.69.9)
(7.710)
(6.38.1)
(5.67.3)
(4.35.5)
(3.34.3)
(2.83.7)
(2.73.5)
(2.73.6)
(37.4)
(45.9)
(4.66.7)
(5.17.4)
(5.27.7)
(5.27.7)
(5.37.8)
(2049)
(2639)
(3045)
(2943)
(2435)
(2232)
(2030)
(97240)
(130190)
(140220)
(130180)
(130180)
(130180)
(130180)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

27
23
21
19
10
13
9.6
8
6.9
7.2
7.3
8
6.2
6.2
6.9
6.4
6.2
6
49
48
33
25
23
23
23
72
63
47
36
30
29
29
114
114
136
164
175
178
182
143
143
167
164
134
125
116
107
107
122
107
107
106
106
4.8
9
4.3

(2532)
(2127)
(1824)
(1722)
(912)
(1114)
(8.511)
(79.1)
(67.8)
(6.28.2)
(6.48.2)
(79)
(5.47)
(5.56.9)
(6.17.8)
(5.77.2)
(5.57)
(5.36.9)
(4355)
(4254)
(2937)
(2228)
(2026)
(2026)
(2026)
(6381)
(5672)
(4153)
(3241)
(2734)
(2633)
(2633)
(69169)
(92137)
(111164)
(136195)
(142211)
(146214)
(149218)
(87213)
(117173)
(136202)
(134198)
(109161)
(102150)
(95138)
(65160)
(87129)
(99147)
(88128)
(89126)
(89125)
(90124)
(4.15.4)
(7.810)
(3.74.8)

(3.24.1)
(2.73.5)
(1.92.4)
(1.62.1)
(48.4)
(4.77)
(3.55.2)
(1.51.9)
(1.62.1)
(11.3)
(0.70.91)
(0.550.71)
(0.470.6)
(0.380.5)
(0.730.94)
(0.530.68)
(0.370.48)
(0.270.35)
(0.210.27)
(0.190.24)
(0.190.24)
(7.79.9)
(8.811)
(8.110)
(7.39.5)
(6.88.8)
(6.78.7)
(6.48.3)
(0.550.71)
(0.540.71)
(0.430.55)
(0.50.65)
(0.470.61)
(0.510.66)
(0.560.72)
(1.31.7)
(0.841.1)
(0.580.74)
(0.520.67)
(0.470.6)
(0.510.65)
(0.510.66)

34
31
21
18
59
53
40
32
34
22
15
12
9.7
8
43
31
21
15
12
11
11
22
26
23
19
17
17
16
7.3
7.1
5.5
6.3
5.8
6.2
6.8
22
14
9.2
8
7
7.6
7.6

(3341)
(2836)
(1925)
(1621)
(3983)
(4364)
(3248)
(2836)
(3039)
(1925)
(1317)
(1013)
(8.611)
(79.1)
(3849)
(2735)
(1924)
(1417)
(1013)
(9.312)
(9.312)
(2025)
(2229)
(2026)
(1722)
(1520)
(1519)
(1418)
(6.48.3)
(6.28)
(4.96.2)
(5.57.3)
(5.16.6)
(5.57.1)
(5.97.7)
(1925)
(1215)
(810)
(79)
(6.17.9)
(6.68.6)
(6.78.6)

3.4
3
2.1
1.8
6
5.8
4.3
1.7
1.8
1.2
0.8
0.63
0.53
0.44
0.83
0.6
0.42
0.31
0.24
0.21
0.21
8.7
10
9.2
8.4
7.8
7.7
7.3
0.63
0.62
0.49
0.57
0.54
0.58
0.63
1.5
0.95
0.66
0.59
0.53
0.58
0.58

European Region

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

189

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%
MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Tajikistan

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
The Former
1990
Yugoslav Republic 1995
of Macedonia
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Turkey
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Turkmenistan
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Ukraine
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
United Kingdom of 1990
Great Britain and 1995
Northern Ireland
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Uzbekistan
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

190

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

5
6
6
6
7
7
7
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
54
59
64
68
71
72
73
4
4
5
5
5
5
5
52
51
49
47
46
46
45
57
58
59
60
61
62
62
21
23
25
26
27
27
27

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.97
1.3
1.7
2.4
2.6
2.7
2.8
0.13
0.24
0.12
0.051
0.049
0.052
0.042
3.6
5.2
4.3
2.3
2.2
2.3
2.2
0.65
0.8
1.2
0.9
0.88
0.86
1
6.1
7
12
12
11
8.7
8.6
0.34
0.36
0.36
0.39
0.38
0.35
0.4
4.9
5.1
4.5
3.9
5
5.3
5.4

(0.461.7)
(0.981.6)
(1.32.1)
(1.83.2)
(1.83.6)
(23.6)
(2.13.7)
(0.110.16)
(0.150.35)
(0.120.12)
(0.040.065)
(0.0350.079)
(0.0350.084)
(0.030.069)
(1.77.1)
(3.57.5)
(2.96.3)
(1.43.8)
(1.33.7)
(1.33.7)
(1.33.6)
(0.481.2)
(0.521.3)
(0.891.8)
(0.681.4)
(0.711.1)
(0.691)
(0.71.9)
(2.912)
(4.112)
(1212)
(1212)
(1111)
(8.78.7)
(5.212)
(0.310.38)
(0.330.4)
(0.320.4)
(0.390.39)
(0.380.39)
(0.350.35)
(0.360.45)
(2.58.1)
(3.86.6)
(4.54.5)
(3.93.9)
(3.66.8)
(3.97.1)
(3.97.1)

RATEa

18
22
27
38
39
40
41
6.9
12
5.9
2.5
2.4
2.5
2
6.6
8.9
6.8
3.3
3.1
3.2
3.1
18
19
27
19
18
17
20
12
14
24
26
23
19
19
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
24
22
18
15
19
20
20

(8.633)
(1728)
(2134)
(2750)
(2753)
(2952)
(3153)
(5.58.3)
(7.818)
(5.85.9)
(23.2)
(1.73.8)
(1.74.1)
(1.43.4)
(3.213)
(5.913)
(4.59.9)
(25.5)
(1.85.2)
(1.95.2)
(1.85)
(1334)
(1231)
(2040)
(1429)
(1422)
(1421)
(1437)
(5.723)
(8.123)
(2424)
(2627)
(2323)
(1919)
(1127)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1240)
(1629)
(1818)
(1515)
(1326)
(1426)
(1426)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

9.1
11
15
23
25
25
26
1.7
1.8
1.2
0.67
0.58
0.56
0.5
27
34
29
19
18
18
18
2.7
2.7
4.7
3.7
3.8
3.7
3.9
29
35
52
58
61
61
60
8.1
8.7
8.6
11
9.4
9.5
9.6
52
56
57
52
60
62
62

(3.618)
(5.118)
(724)
(1037)
(1141)
(1241)
(1243)
(0.393.1)
(0.763)
(0.472.1)
(0.151.2)
(0.151)
(0.160.97)
(0.120.88)
(1052)
(1557)
(1348)
(7.432)
(731)
(7.231)
(7.230)
(0.64.6)
(0.814.7)
(1.28.3)
(0.866.5)
(0.856.7)
(0.826.6)
(0.966.9)
(9.155)
(1261)
(1890)
(20100)
(23100)
(24100)
(25100)
(2.714)
(314)
(314)
(4.118)
(3.216)
(3.316)
(3.316)
(21100)
(2692)
(2693)
(2287)
(2798)
(28100)
(29100)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATE

172
191
243
349
367
370
382
91
92
60
33
28
27
24
51
58
45
28
25
25
24
73
65
105
78
77
75
77
56
69
106
124
132
133
132
14
15
15
19
15
15
15
256
244
229
201
223
228
227

(67340)
(88312)
(113394)
(162575)
(168610)
(171606)
(177619)
(20162)
(39155)
(23104)
(7.358)
(7.249)
(7.847)
(642)
(1896)
(2597)
(2076)
(1147)
(9.943)
(1043)
(9.941)
(16126)
(19113)
(26184)
(18137)
(17137)
(17132)
(19137)
(18107)
(24120)
(37185)
(44215)
(50227)
(52225)
(54223)
(4.824)
(5.225)
(5.124)
(6.830)
(5.226)
(5.425)
(5.426)
(103496)
(112401)
(104376)
(85337)
(101367)
(105373)
(104371)

4.9
5.3
7.7
12
13
14
14
1.5
1.1
0.83
0.6
0.5
0.46
0.43
31
34
29
23
21
21
21
2.4
2.2
4.2
3.3
3.3
3.3
3.3
21
27
41
47
47
46
46
6.6
7
6.9
8.9
7.9
7.7
7.9
26
29
32
33
34
35
35

(37.3)
(4.36.4)
(6.49.2)
(9.715)
(1116)
(1117)
(1217)
(0.942.3)
(0.921.4)
(0.681)
(0.540.67)
(0.430.57)
(0.40.53)
(0.370.5)
(2243)
(2841)
(2435)
(1927)
(1726)
(1725)
(1725)
(1.92.9)
(1.92.5)
(3.74.6)
(2.93.7)
(2.74)
(2.74)
(2.74)
(1529)
(2232)
(3349)
(3956)
(3856)
(3855)
(3855)
(6.27.1)
(6.57.4)
(6.57.4)
(8.39.5)
(7.48.4)
(7.28.3)
(7.48.4)
(1639)
(2435)
(2638)
(2740)
(2841)
(2842)
(2942)

RATE

93
91
125
187
202
204
206
81
58
41
30
24
23
21
58
58
46
33
30
29
28
64
52
92
70
68
67
66
41
52
84
101
102
101
101
12
12
12
15
13
13
13
128
128
128
128
128
128
128

(56138)
(74110)
(103149)
(150227)
(165243)
(167245)
(169247)
(49120)
(4770)
(3450)
(2733)
(2128)
(1926)
(1824)
(4079)
(4770)
(3856)
(2840)
(2536)
(2435)
(2334)
(5080)
(4561)
(82103)
(6179)
(5582)
(5481)
(5480)
(2856)
(4362)
(68101)
(83120)
(83122)
(83121)
(84121)
(1112)
(1113)
(1113)
(1416)
(1214)
(1213)
(1214)
(78190)
(104154)
(104154)
(104154)
(104154)
(105153)
(105153)

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV

Albania

Andorra

Armenia

Austria

Azerbaijan

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

Bulgaria

Croatia

Cyprus

Czech Republic

Denmark

Estonia

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

3
3
3
3
3
3
3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
8
8
8
8
8
8
8
7
8
8
9
9
9
9
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
4
3
4
4
4
4
4
9
8
8
8
8
8
7
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
<1
<1
<1
1
1
1
1
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
5
5
5
5
5
6
6
2
1
1
1
1
1
1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.8
0.77
0.7
0.59
0.5
0.47
0.45
0.026
0.021
0.013
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
1.2
1.5
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.3
1.7
1.6
1.3
1
0.79
0.61
0.42
7.9
8.5
8.9
9.4
9.8
9.9
10
8.2
8.3
7.5
7
6.9
6.9
6.8
1.8
1.6
1.5
1.2
0.93
0.93
0.93
4
2.8
2.3
2
1.9
1.9
1.9
4.1
3.9
3.7
3.5
3.2
3.1
3
2.9
2.5
1.8
1.2
1.1
0.99
0.94
0.041
0.042
0.041
0.041
0.045
0.047
0.049
2.3
2.2
1.7
1.1
0.88
0.79
0.71
0.39
0.54
0.65
0.43
0.38
0.35
0.33
0.47
0.74
0.88
0.55
0.47
0.41
0.33

(0.571.1)
(0.640.91)
(0.590.81)
(0.50.69)
(0.420.58)
(0.40.55)
(0.380.52)
(0.0230.029)
(0.0180.024)
(0.0110.014)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.711.7)
(1.21.8)
(1.82.6)
(1.82.7)
(1.82.7)
(1.82.7)
(1.92.7)
(1.51.9)
(1.31.8)
(1.11.5)
(0.911.2)
(0.680.91)
(0.550.68)
(0.370.48)
(4.812)
(6.910)
(7.211)
(7.711)
(812)
(8.112)
(8.312)
(512)
(6.710)
(6.48.6)
(5.78.5)
(5.68.4)
(5.58.4)
(5.58.2)
(1.62.1)
(1.41.8)
(1.31.7)
(1.11.4)
(0.821.1)
(0.811)
(0.821.1)
(2.56)
(2.33.4)
(1.92.8)
(1.62.4)
(1.62.2)
(1.62.2)
(1.62.2)
(2.56)
(3.24.6)
(3.24.2)
(3.14.1)
(2.83.7)
(2.73.6)
(2.63.5)
(2.53.3)
(2.22.8)
(1.62.1)
(1.11.4)
(0.941.2)
(0.881.1)
(0.831.1)
(0.0370.046)
(0.0370.048)
(0.0360.046)
(0.0360.046)
(0.0390.052)
(0.0410.054)
(0.0420.055)
(22.6)
(1.92.5)
(1.51.9)
(0.971.3)
(0.761)
(0.70.89)
(0.620.81)
(0.340.45)
(0.480.61)
(0.570.74)
(0.370.49)
(0.330.43)
(0.310.39)
(0.290.38)
(0.410.54)
(0.650.83)
(0.771)
(0.480.62)
(0.410.53)
(0.360.46)
(0.290.37)

RATEb

24
24
23
19
16
15
14
49
33
19
12
9
8.2
7.4
33
47
71
72
73
73
73
22
20
16
13
9.5
7.3
5
110
110
110
110
110
110
110
80
81
74
72
72
71
70
18
16
14
12
8.8
8.7
8.7
94
84
63
52
51
50
50
46
46
46
46
43
41
40
64
53
41
28
24
23
21
5.4
5
4.3
4
4.2
4.3
4.4
22
21
16
11
8.4
7.6
6.8
7.7
10
12
7.9
6.8
6.3
6
30
51
64
41
35
30
25

(1733)
(2029)
(1926)
(1622)
(1318)
(1217)
(1216)
(4356)
(2838)
(1722)
(1014)
(8.39.8)
(6.99.7)
(6.28.7)
(2049)
(3856)
(5785)
(5887)
(5987)
(6087)
(6087)
(2025)
(1722)
(1418)
(1114)
(8.111)
(6.68.1)
(4.45.7)
(67163)
(89132)
(89132)
(89132)
(89132)
(90132)
(90131)
(49119)
(6697)
(6485)
(5887)
(5887)
(5787)
(5785)
(1621)
(1418)
(1316)
(1013)
(7.710)
(7.69.8)
(7.69.8)
(57139)
(69102)
(5176)
(4263)
(4358)
(4358)
(4257)
(2868)
(3854)
(4053)
(4053)
(3749)
(3647)
(3546)
(5673)
(4760)
(3646)
(2431)
(2128)
(2025)
(1924)
(4.96)
(4.45.6)
(3.84.9)
(3.54.5)
(3.74.8)
(3.74.9)
(3.85)
(2025)
(1924)
(1418)
(9.512)
(7.39.6)
(6.78.5)
(5.97.7)
(6.78.7)
(9.112)
(1114)
(6.89)
(67.7)
(5.67.1)
(5.36.8)
(2634)
(4558)
(5673)
(3646)
(3039)
(2735)
(2228)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<0.01
<0.01
0.02
0.024
0.028
0.029
0.031
<0.01
0.012
0.022
0.035
0.035
0.029
0.021
0.011
0.018
0.038
0.079
0.11
0.12
0.14
<0.01
0.019
0.069
0.15
0.21
0.23
0.25
0.027
0.059
0.077
0.074
0.063
0.059
0.055

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0120.031)
(0.0140.036)
(0.0160.043)
(0.0170.045)
(0.0170.049)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.023)
(0.0120.035)
(0.0210.052)
(0.020.055)
(0.0190.04)
(0.0130.031)
(<0.010.024)
(<0.010.034)
(0.0150.073)
(0.0420.13)
(0.0590.18)
(0.0660.2)
(0.0740.22)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.039)
(0.0390.11)
(0.0870.22)
(0.170.25)
(0.170.3)
(0.20.31)
(0.0120.047)
(0.0320.093)
(0.0450.12)
(0.0550.095)
(0.0480.08)
(0.0370.085)
(0.0330.081)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.2
1.4
1.5
<1
<1
<1
1.5
2.2
2.4
2.6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11)
(<11.2)
(<11.4)
(<11.5)
(<11.6)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.5)
(<12)
(<12.2)
(<12.4)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.1)
(<12.3)
(1.82.6)
(1.83.1)
(23.3)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.011)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.016
0.014
0.018
0.017
0.015
<0.01
<0.01
0.038
0.038
0.049
0.042
0.034

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.014)
(<0.010.025)
(<0.010.022)
(<0.010.034)
(<0.010.028)
(<0.010.022)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.013)
(0.0240.054)
(0.0260.053)
(0.0370.064)
(0.030.057)
(0.0250.044)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
2.7
2.9
3.7
3.2
2.5

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.74)
(23.9)
(2.74.8)
(2.24.3)
(1.93.3)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

NUMBER

RATEb

653
641
604
506
427
435
431
23

20
20
20
16
13
14
13
44

12
10
4
8
7
590
1 157
1 333
2 206
1 655
1 560
1 410
1 521
1 481
1 185
928

19
13
5
10
8
17
36
43
72
54
51
46
20
19
15
11

441
358
2 620
1 630
5 187
6 034
6 417
7 301
6 390
3 039
4 854
6 799
5 308
5 126
5 250
5 003
1 577
1 380
1 278
1 076
811
806
810
4 073
2 132
2 476
2 111
1 713
1 725
1 321
2 256
3 245
3 349
3 225
2 944
2 683
2 412
2 576
2 114
1 630
1 050
980
832
688
29
36
33
34
42
43
44
1 937
1 834
1 414
973
807
638
641
350
448
587
395
330
294
295
423
624
791
479
401
361
283

5
4
36
21
64
70
72
81
70
30
47
68
54
53
54
52
16
14
13
10
8
8
8
95
64
67
56
45
46
35
26
39
42
42
39
36
32
57
45
36
24
22
19
16
4
4
3
3
4
4
4
19
18
14
10
8
6
6
7
9
11
7
6
5
5
27
43
58
36
30
27
21

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

81
84
87
86
86
93
97
89

95
108
54
117
112
50
77
61
100
74
69
62
89
95
92
89

72
84
33
19
58
64
65
73
63
37
59
91
76
74
76
74
87
87
87
87
87
87
87
101
76
107
107
90
91
71
56
84
91
91
91
86
79
89
85
89
85
91
84
73
70
85
81
82
93
92
89
85
83
85
88
92
81
90
89
83
90
93
88
84
88
89
85
90
87
86
88
85

(61114)
(71101)
(74103)
(74102)
(74102)
(80110)
(83114)
(78102)
(83110)
(93127)
(5058)
(99139)
(95132)
(3483)
(6495)
(5175)
(83123)
(6191)
(5885)
(5276)
(78101)
(83110)
(81106)
(78102)
(6580)
(7596)
(2254)
(1624)
(4872)
(5379)
(5480)
(6190)
(5377)
(2561)
(4972)
(79106)
(6294)
(6191)
(6395)
(6192)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(68166)
(6393)
(89131)
(89132)
(78105)
(79107)
(6183)
(3791)
(71101)
(79105)
(79105)
(79105)
(7599)
(7092)
(78101)
(7697)
(78101)
(7697)
(80104)
(7495)
(6483)
(6378)
(7597)
(7292)
(7393)
(81107)
(80105)
(79102)
(7596)
(7495)
(7597)
(77100)
(81106)
(7291)
(79103)
(78102)
(7494)
(79104)
(81107)
(78100)
(7596)
(78101)
(79102)
(7596)
(79103)
(7799)
(7698)
(78101)
(7697)

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

European Region

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

191

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Finland

France

Georgia

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

Ireland

Israel

Italy

Kazakhstan

Kyrgyzstan

Latvia

Lithuania

192

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

5
5
5
5
5
5
5
57
58
59
61
62
62
63
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
79
82
82
83
82
82
82
10
11
11
11
11
11
11
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
6
7
7
7
7
57
57
57
59
60
60
61
17
16
15
15
16
16
16
4
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
4
4
4
3
3
3
3

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.89
0.76
0.61
0.39
0.38
0.6
0.36
11
11
7.6
6.1
6.4
6
5.9
5.8
5.4
5.1
4.8
4.7
4.7
4.6
17
14
10
6.4
4.2
4.2
4
0.97
1.1
0.84
0.72
0.61
0.56
0.52
4.1
5
3.5
2.1
1.6
1.5
1.5
0.019
0.015
0.012
0.012
0.014
0.015
0.016
0.73
0.55
0.47
0.45
0.42
0.39
0.36
0.39
0.5
0.56
0.49
0.42
0.39
0.37
4.9
5.7
5.1
4.3
3.5
3.2
2.9
23
22
29
33
27
26
24
6.3
6.5
7.5
8
8.3
8.4
8.5
2.5
2.3
2.2
1.6
1.2
1
0.89
3.4
3.4
3
2.5
2.4
2.3
2.3

(0.781)
(0.670.86)
(0.530.69)
(0.340.44)
(0.330.43)
(0.520.68)
(0.310.41)
(1112)
(1011)
(7.18)
(5.76.4)
(66.8)
(5.66.4)
(5.56.2)
(3.58.7)
(4.46.5)
(4.35.9)
(4.25.4)
(4.25.2)
(4.15.2)
(4.15.2)
(1519)
(1216)
(9.112)
(5.67.2)
(3.74.8)
(3.74.8)
(3.54.5)
(0.851.1)
(0.941.2)
(0.740.94)
(0.630.82)
(0.540.69)
(0.490.63)
(0.460.6)
(3.64.7)
(4.45.6)
(3.14)
(1.82.4)
(1.41.9)
(1.31.7)
(1.31.7)
(0.0160.022)
(0.0140.017)
(0.0110.014)
(0.0110.014)
(0.0130.015)
(0.0130.017)
(0.0130.02)
(0.640.82)
(0.480.62)
(0.410.53)
(0.40.51)
(0.370.47)
(0.340.44)
(0.320.41)
(0.360.43)
(0.450.56)
(0.490.64)
(0.430.54)
(0.370.47)
(0.340.45)
(0.320.42)
(4.35.5)
(4.96.5)
(4.65.6)
(3.74.9)
(3.14.1)
(2.93.6)
(2.63.3)
(1434)
(1827)
(2534)
(2739)
(2332)
(2230)
(2028)
(3.89.3)
(5.37.9)
(6.28.9)
(6.59.6)
(6.710)
(6.910)
(710)
(1.53.7)
(1.92.8)
(1.92.6)
(1.41.8)
(11.3)
(0.891.2)
(0.781)
(2.15.1)
(2.74)
(2.63.5)
(2.22.9)
(22.8)
(22.7)
(22.7)

RATEb

18
15
12
7.4
7.2
11
6.7
20
19
13
9.9
10
9.6
9.3
107
107
107
107
107
107
107
21
17
13
7.7
5.1
5.1
4.8
9.6
10
7.6
6.4
5.4
4.9
4.6
40
48
35
21
16
15
15
7.4
5.7
4.4
4.1
4.5
4.8
5
21
15
12
11
9.6
8.8
8.1
8.7
9.5
9.4
7.4
5.9
5.4
4.9
8.6
10
8.9
7.3
5.9
5.4
4.9
139
139
196
215
175
163
151
143
143
151
158
159
159
159
92
93
92
69
51
45
39
92
92
86
74
71
70
69

(1620)
(1317)
(1013)
(6.58.4)
(6.38.1)
(9.813)
(5.97.6)
(1921)
(1820)
(1214)
(9.311)
(9.711)
(910)
(8.89.9)
(65158)
(87128)
(90125)
(94120)
(94119)
(95119)
(95119)
(1924)
(1519)
(1114)
(6.88.7)
(4.55.8)
(4.55.8)
(4.25.4)
(8.311)
(8.811)
(6.78.6)
(5.67.3)
(4.76.1)
(4.45.6)
(45.2)
(3545)
(4255)
(3039)
(1823)
(1419)
(1317)
(1317)
(6.48.5)
(5.16.4)
(3.85.1)
(3.64.6)
(4.24.8)
(4.35.3)
(4.16.1)
(1823)
(1317)
(1114)
(9.612)
(8.511)
(7.79.9)
(7.19.2)
(89.5)
(8.411)
(8.111)
(6.68.2)
(5.26.6)
(4.76.1)
(4.35.6)
(7.59.7)
(8.611)
(89.8)
(6.48.3)
(5.16.8)
(4.86)
(4.35.5)
(84206)
(113167)
(167228)
(175259)
(146206)
(137192)
(127177)
(87212)
(116172)
(125179)
(129191)
(129192)
(130191)
(131191)
(56137)
(76112)
(79107)
(6079)
(4558)
(4051)
(3445)
(56137)
(75111)
(7499)
(6485)
(6182)
(6081)
(5980)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.5
0.46
0.37
0.35
0.38
0.37
0.36
<0.01
0.013
0.024
0.053
0.07
0.07
0.069
0.25
0.21
0.18
0.13
0.099
0.097
0.097
0.019
0.022
0.018
0.016
0.014
0.013
0.012
0.063
0.058
0.033
0.018
0.015
0.015
0.015
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.014
0.017
0.017
0.016
0.016
<0.01
0.017
0.027
0.026
0.021
0.02
0.018
0.25
0.3
0.29
0.25
0.21
0.19
0.18
<0.01
<0.01
0.028
0.19
0.25
0.29
0.33
<0.01
<0.01
0.011
0.059
0.15
0.11
0.24
<0.01
0.025
0.071
0.062
0.082
0.087
0.089
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.01
0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.320.74)
(0.30.66)
(0.240.53)
(0.230.49)
(0.250.54)
(0.240.51)
(0.240.51)
(<0.010.025)
(<0.010.034)
(<0.010.05)
(0.0320.08)
(0.0450.1)
(0.0370.11)
(0.0580.08)
(0.150.37)
(0.120.31)
(0.110.26)
(0.080.19)
(0.0620.14)
(0.060.14)
(0.0610.14)
(0.0110.029)
(0.0130.033)
(0.0110.026)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.010.02)
(<0.010.019)
(<0.010.018)
(0.0350.099)
(0.0310.092)
(0.0180.052)
(0.010.029)
(<0.010.024)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.010.024)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.021)
(0.0110.025)
(0.0110.024)
(0.010.024)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.025)
(0.0150.044)
(0.0160.039)
(0.0130.031)
(<0.010.035)
(0.0160.02)
(0.130.41)
(0.150.48)
(0.20.39)
(0.160.36)
(0.120.31)
(0.130.27)
(0.110.25)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.058)
(0.150.24)
(0.20.3)
(0.230.34)
(0.270.4)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.017)
(0.0210.11)
(0.110.19)
(0.0830.14)
(0.190.29)
(<0.010.026)
(<0.010.054)
(0.0440.11)
(0.0440.083)
(0.0610.11)
(0.0660.11)
(0.0690.11)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.014)
(<0.010.017)
(<0.010.017)
(<0.010.016)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.2
1.6
1.6
1.6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.3
1.6
1.8
2.1
<1
<1
<1
1.2
2.9
2.1
4.4
<1
1
3
2.7
3.6
3.9
3.9
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.3)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11)
(<11.8)
(12.3)
(<12.6)
(1.31.8)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.2)
(<11.6)
(<11.5)
(<11)
(<11.7)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.6)
(1.31.9)
(1.52.2)
(1.72.5)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<12.3)
(2.23.6)
(1.62.7)
(3.55.5)
(<1<1)
(<12.2)
(1.84.4)
(1.93.6)
(2.74.7)
(2.94.9)
(34.9)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

NUMBER

RATEb

772
661
527
339
331
519
312
9 030
8 723
6 122
4 887
3 355
2 890
2 906
1 537
1 625
4 397
4 501
4 412
4 732
4 674
14 653
12 198
9 064
5 539
3 664
3 659
3 436
877
939
703
626
535
465
466
3 588
4 339
3 073
1 808
1 428
1 315
1 313
18
12
13
10
6
11
22
624
458
386
387
337
340
319
234
398
537
371
322
347
340
4 246
5 627
3 501
3 828
3 414
2 541
1 721
10 969
11 310
25 843
25 512
23 140
20 508
19 703
2 306
3 393
6 205
6 329
6 628
5 765
5 652
906
1 541
1 982
1 409
1 046
951
913
1 471
2 362
2 657
2 114
2 095
1 895
1 750

15
13
10
6
6
10
6
16
15
10
8
5
5
5
28
32
93
101
100
108
107
19
15
11
7
4
4
4
9
9
6
6
5
4
4
35
42
30
18
14
13
13
7
4
5
3
2
3
7
18
13
10
9
8
8
7
5
7
9
6
5
5
5
7
10
6
7
6
4
3
66
71
173
168
148
129
123
52
74
125
126
127
109
106
34
62
83
61
46
42
41
40
65
76
62
62
57
53

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

87
87
87
87
87
87
87
80
81
81
81
52
48
50
26
30
87
94
94
102
101
87
87
87
87
87
87
87
90
88
84
87
88
83
89
87
87
87
87
87
87
87
95
79
104
83
43
73
136
86
84
83
85
80
88
88
60
79
95
76
77
88
93
87
99
69
89
96
78
58
48
51
88
78
84
79
82
37
52
83
79
80
69
66
37
66
90
88
90
93
103
43
70
88
83
87
81
76

(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7686)
(7686)
(7686)
(7686)
(4955)
(4551)
(4753)
(1843)
(2537)
(74103)
(84107)
(84106)
(91114)
(90113)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(79104)
(77100)
(7595)
(7799)
(77100)
(7494)
(78102)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(83110)
(7089)
(90122)
(7494)
(4046)
(6682)
(113168)
(7698)
(7495)
(7394)
(7697)
(7291)
(77100)
(77100)
(5565)
(7089)
(83110)
(6885)
(6987)
(78101)
(81107)
(7799)
(86115)
(6276)
(79102)
(84112)
(7088)
(5267)
(3279)
(4263)
(76104)
(6596)
(72101)
(6895)
(7097)
(2560)
(4364)
(70100)
(6697)
(6698)
(5784)
(5681)
(2561)
(5581)
(78105)
(77102)
(79103)
(82106)
(91118)
(2971)
(5886)
(76103)
(7396)
(76102)
(7094)
(6689)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV

Luxembourg

Malta

Monaco

Montenegro

Netherlands

Norway

Poland

Portugal

Republic of
Moldova

Romania

Russian
Federation

San Marino

Serbia

Serbia &
Montenegro
Slovakia

Slovenia

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
15
15
16
16
17
17
17
4
4
4
5
5
5
5
38
38
38
38
38
38
38
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
23
23
22
22
22
22
21
148
149
147
144
143
143
143
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATEb

0.044
0.044
0.044
0.043
0.044
0.045
0.045
0.02
0.024
0.02
0.027
0.048
0.05
0.05
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(0.0370.051)
(0.0390.049)
(0.0380.051)
(0.0380.049)
(0.0390.05)
(0.0390.051)
(0.0390.051)
(0.0180.022)
(0.0220.025)
(0.0180.022)
(0.0240.03)
(0.0410.055)
(0.0440.056)
(0.0440.056)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

11
11
10
9.5
9.1
9
8.8
5.5
6.1
5
6.5
11
12
12
3.7
3.5
<1

0.17
0.14
0.13
0.12
1.5
1.9
1.5
1.3
1.1
1.2
1.2
0.34
0.27
0.28
0.32
0.31
0.3
0.3
19
18
13
9.5
8.7
8.7
8.8
7.1
6.4
4.9
3.8
3.2
3.1
3.1
5
4.9
5.6
6.2
6.3
6.4
6.5
33
33
37
36
29
27
25
160
160
180
150
150
150
150
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(0.160.2)
(0.130.17)
(0.120.15)
(0.10.14)
(1.31.7)
(1.72.2)
(1.41.7)
(1.11.5)
(11.3)
(11.4)
(1.11.4)
(0.30.38)
(0.240.3)
(0.250.31)
(0.280.36)
(0.270.35)
(0.260.34)
(0.260.33)
(1621)
(1621)
(1114)
(8.311)
(7.69.8)
(7.69.9)
(7.710)
(6.38.1)
(5.67.3)
(4.35.5)
(3.34.3)
(2.83.7)
(2.73.5)
(2.73.6)
(37.4)
(45.9)
(4.66.7)
(5.17.4)
(5.27.7)
(5.27.7)
(5.37.8)
(2049)
(2639)
(3045)
(2943)
(2435)
(2232)
(2030)
(97240)
(130190)
(140220)
(130180)
(130180)
(130180)
(130180)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

27
23
21
19
10
13
9.6
8
6.9
7.2
7.3
8
6.2
6.2
6.9
6.4
6.2
6
49
48
33
25
23
23
23
72
63
47
36
30
29
29
114
114
136
164
175
178
182
143
143
167
164
134
125
116
107
107
122
107
107
106
106
4.8
9
4.3

3.4
3
2.1
1.8
6
5.8
4.3
1.7
1.8
1.2
0.8
0.63
0.53
0.44
0.83
0.6
0.42
0.31
0.24
0.21
0.21

(3.24.1)
(2.73.5)
(1.92.4)
(1.62.1)
(48.4)
(4.77)
(3.55.2)
(1.51.9)
(1.62.1)
(11.3)
(0.70.91)
(0.550.71)
(0.470.6)
(0.380.5)
(0.730.94)
(0.530.68)
(0.370.48)
(0.270.35)
(0.210.27)
(0.190.24)
(0.190.24)

34
31
21
18
59
53
40
32
34
22
15
12
9.7
8
43
31
21
15
12
11
11

(9.713)
(9.712)
(8.712)
(8.311)
(7.910)
(7.810)
(7.710)
(56.1)
(5.76.5)
(4.45.6)
(5.77.3)
(9.813)
(1113)
(1113)
(3.24.2)
(33.9)
(<1<1)

(2532)
(2127)
(1824)
(1722)
(912)
(1114)
(8.511)
(79.1)
(67.8)
(6.28.2)
(6.48.2)
(79)
(5.47)
(5.56.9)
(6.17.8)
(5.77.2)
(5.57)
(5.36.9)
(4355)
(4254)
(2937)
(2228)
(2026)
(2026)
(2026)
(6381)
(5672)
(4153)
(3241)
(2734)
(2633)
(2633)
(69169)
(92137)
(111164)
(136195)
(142211)
(146214)
(149218)
(87213)
(117173)
(136202)
(134198)
(109161)
(102150)
(95138)
(65160)
(87129)
(99147)
(88128)
(89126)
(89125)
(90124)
(4.15.4)
(7.810)
(3.74.8)

(3341)
(2836)
(1925)
(1621)
(3983)
(4364)
(3248)
(2836)
(3039)
(1925)
(1317)
(1013)
(8.611)
(79.1)
(3849)
(2735)
(1924)
(1417)
(1013)
(9.312)
(9.312)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.013)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.2
1.3
1.4

NUMBER

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.2)
(<12.8)
(<12.7)
(<13.2)

<0.01
0.023
0.052
0.052
0.048
0.045
0.049
0.052
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.1
0.21
0.2
0.18
0.17
0.18
0.19
0.32
0.71
0.83
0.86
0.56
0.61
0.69
0.02
0.049
0.17
<0.01
0.32
0.33
0.38
0.15
0.41
0.74
0.82
0.63
0.58
0.53
<0.01
0.095
2.7
6.6
9.2
12
8.1

(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.038)
(0.0290.081)
(0.0320.076)
(0.0280.072)
(0.0270.069)
(0.0360.063)
(0.0370.07)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(0.0490.17)
(0.120.34)
(0.120.31)
(0.10.27)
(0.10.26)
(0.110.27)
(0.110.28)
(0.150.56)
(0.421.1)
(0.531.2)
(0.730.99)
(0.490.63)
(0.380.89)
(0.450.97)
(<0.010.068)
(0.0170.097)
(0.110.26)
(<0.010.016)
(0.250.39)
(0.260.4)
(0.310.47)
(0.0480.31)
(0.220.67)
(0.431.1)
(0.471.2)
(0.360.96)
(0.340.89)
(0.310.81)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0450.16)
(1.64)
(4.49.2)
(3.318)
(9.815)
(6.89.4)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3.3
7
8
8.1
5.3
5.7
6.4
<1
1.1
4.2
<1
8.8
9.1
11
<1
1.8
3.4
3.7
2.9
2.7
2.5
<1
<1
1.8
4.6
6.4
8.5
5.7

(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.55.6)
(4.111)
(5.211)
(79.3)
(4.65.9)
(3.68.3)
(4.29.1)
(<11.6)
(<12.2)
(2.66.3)
(<1<1)
(6.911)
(7.211)
(8.613)
(<11.3)
(<13)
(1.95.2)
(2.25.7)
(1.74.4)
(1.64.1)
(1.43.8)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.12.7)
(3.16.4)
(2.313)
(6.810)
(4.86.6)

0.043
0.045
0.032
0.029

(0.0240.067)
(0.0240.071)
(0.0170.051)
(0.0150.046)

<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

48
32
44
37
0

13
8
10
8
0

24
13
11
16
21
48
41
20
1
1
0

5
4
3
4
5
12
10
5
3
3
0

1
156
131
113
110
1 369
1 619
1 244
1 127
964
1 111
1 029
285
236
221
269
252
258
261
16 136
15 958
10 931
8 203
7 421
7 645
7 002
6 214
5 577
4 227
3 303
2 817
2 723
2 728
1 728
2 925
2 935
5 141
4 442
4 347
4 122
16 256
23 271
27 470
26 104
21 724
20 868
18 379
50 641
84 980
140 677
127 930
128 263
126 227
118 641
1
2
1

3
25
21
18
17
9
10
8
7
6
7
6
7
5
5
6
5
5
5
42
42
29
21
19
20
18
63
55
41
31
26
26
26
40
67
71
136
122
121
115
70
103
124
120
101
97
86
34
57
96
89
90
88
83
4
8
4

3 208
2 714
1 879
2 326
4 194
2 798
2 864
1 448
1 540
1 010
710
559
438
386
722
525
368
269
208
186
169

33
28
19
24
41
26
27
27
29
19
13
10
8
7
37
27
19
13
10
9
8

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

RATEb

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

110
73
100
85
0

54
64
47
81
79
101
83
40
87
87

93
92
85
92
89
84
81
86
85
94
85
84
88
80
84
82
86
88
87
87
87
87
85
88
80
87
87
87
87
87
87
87
35
59
52
83
70
68
63
49
72
74
73
75
78
74
32
53
79
83
84
83
78
87
87
87

95
89
89
128
70
48
67
86
84
85
89
89
83
88
87
87
87
87
87
87
79

(94130)
(6581)
(86116)
(7697)

(4762)
(5870)
(4450)
(7291)
(7189)
(88118)
(7494)
(3645)
(77100)
(77100)

(77100)
(7799)
(7497)
(81105)
(79102)
(7495)
(7292)
(7698)
(7597)
(82108)
(7596)
(7596)
(78100)
(7190)
(7595)
(7393)
(7698)
(78101)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7697)
(77100)
(7091)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(2357)
(4973)
(4464)
(70100)
(5886)
(5683)
(5377)
(3380)
(5988)
(6191)
(6190)
(6292)
(6595)
(6290)
(2152)
(4465)
(6597)
(69101)
(71101)
(7199)
(6793)
(77100)
(77100)
(77100)

European Region

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

(79100)
(77100)
(77100)
(112149)
(50105)
(4059)
(5682)
(7698)
(7495)
(7596)
(78102)
(78102)
(7494)
(78101)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7090)

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

193

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Tajikistan

The Former
Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia

Turkey

Turkmenistan

Ukraine

United Kingdom of
Great Britain and
Northern Ireland

Uzbekistan

194

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

39
39
40
43
45
46
46
9
9
9
9
9
9
9
7
7
7
7
8
8
8
5
6
6
6
7
7
7
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
54
59
64
68
71
72
73
4
4
5
5
5
5
5
52
51
49
47
46
46
45
57
58
59
60
61
62
62
21
23
25
26
27
27
27

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

8.7
10
9.2
8.4
7.8
7.7
7.3
0.63
0.62
0.49
0.57
0.54
0.58
0.63
1.5
0.95
0.66
0.59
0.53
0.58
0.58
4.9
5.3
7.7
12
13
14
14
1.5
1.1
0.83
0.6
0.5
0.46
0.43
31
34
29
23
21
21
21
2.4
2.2
4.2
3.3
3.3
3.3
3.3
21
27
41
47
47
46
46
6.6
7
6.9
8.9
7.9
7.7
7.9
26
29
32
33
34
35
35

(7.79.9)
(8.811)
(8.110)
(7.39.5)
(6.88.8)
(6.78.7)
(6.48.3)
(0.550.71)
(0.540.71)
(0.430.55)
(0.50.65)
(0.470.61)
(0.510.66)
(0.560.72)
(1.31.7)
(0.841.1)
(0.580.74)
(0.520.67)
(0.470.6)
(0.510.65)
(0.510.66)
(37.3)
(4.36.4)
(6.49.2)
(9.715)
(1116)
(1117)
(1217)
(0.942.3)
(0.921.4)
(0.681)
(0.540.67)
(0.430.57)
(0.40.53)
(0.370.5)
(2243)
(2841)
(2435)
(1927)
(1726)
(1725)
(1725)
(1.92.9)
(1.92.5)
(3.74.6)
(2.93.7)
(2.74)
(2.74)
(2.74)
(1529)
(2232)
(3349)
(3956)
(3856)
(3855)
(3855)
(6.27.1)
(6.57.4)
(6.57.4)
(8.39.5)
(7.48.4)
(7.28.3)
(7.48.4)
(1639)
(2435)
(2638)
(2740)
(2841)
(2842)
(2942)

RATEb

22
26
23
19
17
17
16
7.3
7.1
5.5
6.3
5.8
6.2
6.8
22
14
9.2
8
7
7.6
7.6
93
91
125
187
202
204
206
81
58
41
30
24
23
21
58
58
46
33
30
29
28
64
52
92
70
68
67
66
41
52
84
101
102
101
101
12
12
12
15
13
13
13
128
128
128
128
128
128
128

(2025)
(2229)
(2026)
(1722)
(1520)
(1519)
(1418)
(6.48.3)
(6.28)
(4.96.2)
(5.57.3)
(5.16.6)
(5.57.1)
(5.97.7)
(1925)
(1215)
(810)
(79)
(6.17.9)
(6.68.6)
(6.78.6)
(56138)
(74110)
(103149)
(150227)
(165243)
(167245)
(169247)
(49120)
(4770)
(3450)
(2733)
(2128)
(1926)
(1824)
(4079)
(4770)
(3856)
(2840)
(2536)
(2435)
(2334)
(5080)
(4561)
(82103)
(6179)
(5582)
(5481)
(5480)
(2856)
(4362)
(68101)
(83120)
(83122)
(83121)
(84121)
(1112)
(1113)
(1113)
(1416)
(1214)
(1213)
(1214)
(78190)
(104154)
(104154)
(104154)
(104154)
(105153)
(105153)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.87
1.3
1.2
1.1
0.99
1
0.95
<0.01
0.011
<0.01
0.014
0.013
0.015
0.016
0.047
0.04
0.031
0.032
0.032
0.034
0.036
<0.01
0.041
0.12
0.23
0.31
0.34
0.37

(0.571.2)
(0.871.8)
(0.771.6)
(0.721.5)
(0.851.1)
(0.681.4)
(0.641.3)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.017)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.021)
(<0.010.02)
(<0.010.022)
(<0.010.025)
(0.0260.074)
(0.0240.059)
(0.0190.046)
(0.020.048)
(0.020.046)
(0.0210.05)
(0.0220.053)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0210.068)
(0.0780.17)
(0.130.37)
(<0.011.9)
(0.280.4)
(0.280.47)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

2.2
3.3
2.9
2.5
2.2
2.2
2.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.9
3.6
4.7
5
5.3

(1.53.2)
(2.24.6)
(1.94)
(1.73.4)
(1.92.5)
(1.53.1)
(1.42.9)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.2)
(1.32.7)
(25.7)
(<128)
(4.25.9)
(4.16.8)

<0.01
0.013
0.029
0.039
0.049
0.051
0.054

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.024)
(0.0140.05)
(0.0190.066)
(0.0250.082)
(0.0260.084)
(0.0270.09)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

0.3
0.94
3.2
4.6
4.3
5.1
6
0.077
0.093
0.14
0.27
0.28
0.29
0.31
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.17
0.45
0.58
0.71

(0.0830.65)
(0.521.5)
(2.14.5)
(3.16.3)
(3.55.2)
(4.26.1)
(57.1)
(0.0420.12)
(0.0530.14)
(0.0820.2)
(0.170.4)
(0.190.4)
(0.180.43)
(0.190.45)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.014)
(0.140.21)
(0.370.55)
(0.460.71)
(0.560.87)

<1
1.8
6.6
9.7
9.4
11
13
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.7
2.1
2.6

(<11.3)
(12.9)
(4.49.2)
(6.613)
(7.711)
(9.213)
(1116)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.42.1)
(1.72.6)
(2.13.2)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

NUMBER

RATEb

7 600
8 764
7 993
7 281
6 769
6 687
6 377
557
564
417
539
457
515
552
1 278
830
544
508
319
333
323
2 460
2 029
2 779
5 460
6 396
6 125
6 297

20
22
20
17
15
15
14
7
6
5
6
5
6
6
19
12
8
7
4
4
4
46
35
45
85
96
90
92

786
641
598
450
450
384
24 468
22 981
18 038
19 744
17 600
16 757
15 879
2 325
1 939
4 038
3 191
3 757
3 157
3 230
16 465
21 459
32 945
39 608
37 832
36 075
33 857
5 908
6 176
6 220
8 173
6 586
7 008
7 219
9 414
9 866
15 750
21 513
17 040
17 540
16 883

40
32
29
22
22
19
45
39
28
29
25
23
22
63
46
90
67
76
63
64
32
42
67
84
82
79
74
10
11
11
14
11
11
12
46
43
64
83
64
65
62

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

87
87
87
87
87
87
87
89
90
85
94
85
89
87
87
87
83
86
60
58
55
50
38
36
45
47
44
44

69
77
99
91
97
89
78
67
61
87
82
80
77
99
88
97
96
113
94
96
78
81
80
84
81
78
73
89
89
90
92
84
91
91
36
34
50
65
50
51
48

(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(78102)
(80104)
(7597)
(82109)
(7596)
(78101)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7395)
(7698)
(5369)
(5166)
(4963)
(3482)
(3247)
(3044)
(3756)
(3958)
(3754)
(3754)
(5785)
(6495)
(90110)
(79105)
(84112)
(77104)
(57113)
(5683)
(5176)
(73105)
(68101)
(6798)
(6594)
(80126)
(76104)
(87109)
(85110)
(93138)
(78117)
(80119)
(57113)
(6898)
(6799)
(70102)
(6899)
(6595)
(6289)
(8395)
(8395)
(8496)
(8698)
(7989)
(8597)
(8698)
(2459)
(2841)
(4161)
(5480)
(4161)
(4262)
(4058)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Albania

20

13

Andorra

44

Armenia

17

46

Austria

20

Azerbaijan

36

70

Belarus

30

52

Belgium

16

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

95

35

Bulgaria

26

32

Croatia

57

16

Cyprus

Czech Republic

19

Denmark

Estonia

27

21

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
653
641
604
506
427
435
431
23
12
10
4
8
7
590
1 157
1 333
2 206
1 655
1 560
1 410
1 521
1 481
1 185
928
441
358
2 620
1 630
5 187
6 034
6 417
7 301
6 390
3 039
4 854
6 799
5 308
5 126
5 250
5 003
1 577
1 380
1 278
1 076
811
806
810
4 073
2 132
2 476
2 111
1 713
1 725
1 321
2 256
3 245
3 349
3 225
2 944
2 683
2 412
2 576
2 114
1 630
1 050
980
832
688
29
36
33
34
42
43
44
1 937
1 834
1 414
973
807
638
641
350
448
587
395
330
294
295
423
624
791
479
401
361
283

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

OTHER RELAPSE

139
171
196
170
171
145

223
188
134
87
109
105

226
234
167
145
136
165

1
5
3
2
0

9
1
1
4
4

2
4
0
1
3

436
621
581
487
440
339

451
505
1 049
724
725
639

75
153
365
296
299
351

467
324
234

765
652
519

249
209
175

90
76

268
213

34
69

669
890
1 561
1 409
1 487
1 997

620
3 978
2 508
2 728
3 124
2 275

93
245
651
993
1 261
965

1 845
2 547
1 235
1 060
1 201
1 269

2 148
2 985
3 710
3 074
3 002
2 647

518
442
363
500
430
429

400
409
380
311
280

534
454
406
287
294

366
326
290
213
107

865
759
640
509
609
441

997
1 287
1 106
919
862
529

140
261
258
235
188
161

1 087
2 524
1 214
1 020
894
806

1 709
0
1 511
1 121
892
748

449
442
376
687
443
747

1 204
0
372
328
302
183

703

165

42

575
515
410
382

103
101
81
87

0
36
39
36

6
4
9
6
14

11
10
13
28
15

13
17
12
7
3

487
420
308
249
218

1 026
679
461
432
322

300
290
204
126
54

128
171
129
106
101

186
244
145
140
125

128
144
121
83
25

369
255
162
144
135
99

124
320
217
180
175
134

60
67
46
30
18
17

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

53
11
9
25
19
16

8
34
7
2
9

53
19
43
32
21
25

0
10
0

0
0
0

0
0
0
1
0

0
0
0
1
0

0
0
0
2
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

38
54
211
148
96
81

22
116
470
446
370

38
76
327
618
542
451

0
0
0

0
0

30
26

30
26

45
0

4
0

21
29

25
29

245
301

47
74
1 314
1 287
1 429
1 153

0
1 886
2 446
955
844

47
74
3 200
3 733
2 384
1 997

1 215
2 161
1 160

0
1 049
357
261
456

343
825
1 049
849
878
1 114

95

0
68
67

80
89
68
67

0
0
158

130
169
107
50
66
32

24
49
17
47
69

130
193
156
67
113
101

0
6
0
0

10
297
0

383
124
106
157
111

0
77
207
215
237

383
201
313
372
348

0
13
0

343
825

492
617
658
80
89

0
125

128
214

42

23
7

94
36
62
43

0
0
0
1
2

3
2
1

0
0
3
3
3

21
25
0
0

0
34
61

21
25
34
61

1
37

6
28
0
0
6

0
29
37
4

6
28
29
37
10

0
41

0
3
0

71
116
54
47
30
33

0
40
43
50
46

71
116
94
90
80
79

0
9

0
44

94

6
11

0
64

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

38
48
59
66
61
58

10
83
75
33
0

49
55
36
40
38
35

38
33
31

25
26

52
18
38
34
32
47

46
46
25
26
29
32

43
47
48
52
49

46
37
37
36
41
45

39
100
45
48
50
52

63

39
39
42
32

35
29
41
18
48

32
38
40
37
40

41
41
47
43
45

75
44
43
44
44
42

European Region

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

195

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV
NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

YEAR

Finland

15

France

16

Georgia

28

107

Germany

19

Greece

Hungary

35

13

Iceland

Ireland

18

Israel

Italy

Kazakhstan

66

123

Kyrgyzstan

52

106

Latvia

34

41

Lithuania

40

196

53

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
772
661
527
339
331
519
312
9 030
8 723
6 122
4 887
3 355
2 890
2 906
1 537
1 625
4 397
4 501
4 412
4 732
4 674
14 653
12 198
9 064
5 539
3 664
3 659
3 436
877
939
703
626
535
465
466
3 588
4 339
3 073
1 808
1 428
1 315
1 313
18
12
13
10
6
11
22
624
458
386
387
337
340
319
234
398
537
371
322
347
340
4 246
5 627
3 501
3 828
3 414
2 541
1 721
10 969
11 310
25 843
25 512
23 140
20 508
19 703
2 306
3 393
6 205
6 329
6 628
5 765
5 652
906
1 541
1 982
1 409
1 046
951
913
1 471
2 362
2 657
2 114
2 095
1 895
1 750

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

OTHER RELAPSE

244
205
130
104
93
82

193
136
114
104
198
146

224
157
95
123
114
84

0
114
0

3 449
1 815
1 941
1 222
1 019

2 969
1 364
1 557
1 115
1 038

2 305
1 665
1 389
967
439

51
394

221
601
1 509
1 868
2 055
2 140

1 087
2 213
1 524
1 063
1 119
1 088

121
1 324
1 261
1 217
1 283
1 155

3 852
0
1 379
954
1 025
946

6 473

1 873

2 801
1 797
1 765
1 614

1 211
801
353
773

235
197
80
198

339
322
374
196

796
412
423
346
363

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

29
0
0

0
22
19

29
22
19

15

15

0
0
14
0

0
0
0

371
379

0
371
379

116
2 078

0
0
0

196
259
207
264
275
291

422
1 945
1 413
291
1 118

196
681
2 152
1 677
566
1 409

2
11
955
4

9
402
17

148
103
114
86

345
338
138
195

493
441
252
281

161
472
635
671

81
107
80
44

0
26

48
0
1
1

74
83
2

48
74
84
3

67
51
121

3 292
2 361
1 137
896
800

251
221
117
79
51

0
16

79
131
107
85

292
216
178
126

371
347
285
211

0
7

2
1
2
2
3
6

3
7
3
1
3
12

7
4
5
3
2
4

0
2
0

0
1
0
0
1
0

0
1
0
0
0

0
1
1
0
1
0

0
1
0

138
130
123
95
84

150
156
124
119
122

96
99
81
60
112

8
59
1

2
2
1
7

20
38
40
9
31

22
40
41
16
31

36
93
139
78

216
142
95
119
103

213
168
147
130
162

100
55
76
89
74

0
0
0
0
0

8
6
4
9
1

0
1
0
0
3

8
7
4
9
4

0
0
0
0
0

1 413
687
1 275
938
885
578

2 700
891
1 506
1 576
863
759

1 514
522
1 047
900
408
384

0
385
0

269
0
0

356
293
292

625
293
292

3 022
8 903
6 911
6 193
5 213
4 769

5 966
11 324
14 472
10 737
9 319
8 745

1 002
2 555
920
2 754
2 278
2 127

832
1 296
1 972
1 712
1 609
1 645

1 685
2 929
2 141
2 036
2 267
2 028

749
1 683
1 805
1 585
1 558
1 635

504
637
536
400
367
339

693
793
554
400
377
400

226
285
148
118
47
86

979
776
964
884
742
719

1 049
1 051
793
744
702
633

206
503
357
264
158
221

71

71

16
712
1 336
703

1 320
3 061
3 209
3 456
3 698
4 062

2 032
11 800
5 773
5 673
5 151

1 320
5 093
15 009
9 229
9 371
9 213

3 117
0
4 397
3 696

127
297
411
398
331
344

258
436
358
427
643

127
555
847
756
758
987

0
39
0

118
267
171
128
121
88

108
34
24
26
21

118
375
205
152
147
109

0
75
0

128
327
0
203
218
177

182
460
154
186
187

128
509
460
357
404
364

0
0
0

897

0
141
166

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

56
60
53
50
32
36

54
57
55
52
50

17
21
50
64
65
66

37

33
35
37
37

41
38
18
50

19
15
27
28
31

40
13
40
67
50
33

48
45
50
44
41

50
46
39
48
39

34
44
46
37
51
43

34
44
32
37
36
35

33
31
48
46
42
45

42
45
49
50
49
46

48
42
55
54
51
53

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Luxembourg

13

Malta

Monaco

Montenegro

25

17

Netherlands

Norway

Poland

42

18

Portugal

63

26

Republic of
Moldova

40

115

Romania

70

86

Russian
Federation

34

83

San Marino

Serbia

33
Serbia (without Kosovo)

24

Kosovo

Serbia &
Montenegro
41

34

Slovakia

27

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
1990
1995
2000
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
48
32
44
37
0
24
13
11
16
21
48
41
20
1
1
0

1
156
131
113
110
1 369
1 619
1 244
1 127
964
1 111
1 029
285
236
221
269
252
258
261
16 136
15 958
10 931
8 203
7 421
7 645
7 002
6 214
5 577
4 227
3 303
2 817
2 723
2 728
1 728
2 925
2 935
5 141
4 442
4 347
4 122
16 256
23 271
27 470
26 104
21 724
20 868
18 379
50 641
84 980
140 677
127 930
128 263
126 227
118 641
1
2
1

3 208
2 714
1 879
2 326
2 146
1 722
1 625
1 442
1 062
992
254
884
4 194
2 798
2 864
1 448
1 540
1 010
710
559
438
386

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

21
14
0

19
20
0

0
3
0

18

5
5
5
15
12
4

4
9
10
19
11
6

2
2
6
12
6
10

64
65
53
39

66
38
43
49

1
13
20
12
14

575
289
237
189
203
176

1 522
528
491
371
392
370

513
427
385
388
499
463

62
37
48
53
42

57
103
119
91
125

89
79
102
108
37

6 955
3 180
2 823
2 650
2 658
2 484

7 285
6 392
4 591
3 835
4 047
3 625

647
477
789
576
408
501

2 019
1 863
1 302
1 053
1 043

1 531
1 005
974
953
826

1 759
1 178
905
631
405

665
651
1 696
1 533
1 318
1 267

1 958
1 788
2 237
1 942
2 015
2 073

154
122
568
476
471
405

10 469
10 202
10 801
9 511
8 987
7 951

8 303
10 180
8 038
6 093
5 681
5 113

37 512
27 467
32 605
33 949
33 351
31 416

OTHER RELAPSE

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

4
0
0

0
0

4
0
0

28
27
5

0
1
5
2
3

0
0
1
7
2
3

1
0
1
9

13
8
5
8

14
2
6
4

27
10
11
12

0
1
0

0
14
16
17
16

70
30
33
29
27

70
44
49
46
43

0
20
17

28
2
0
0

10
14
27

28
12
14
27

0
155
0

1 071
882
0
360
377
392

0
1 077
660
311
507

1 071
882
1 077
1 020
688
899

66
326

268
177
122
114
123

304
228
178
148

268
481
350
292
271

0
0
0

148
374
640
491
543
377

0
1 137
1 374
1 120
1 311

148
374
1 777
1 865
1 663
1 688

3 422
3 474
3 568
3 170
2 486
2 899

0
712
0

1 077
3 614
3 697
2 950
3 002
2 416

156
3 241
3 062
2 399
2 699

1 077
3 770
6 938
6 012
5 401
5 115

42 241
102 228
74 301
75 775
72 931
67 894

5 227
5 313
12 320
3 769
10 945
3 513

7 342
0
7 081

5 669
8 704
7 428
9 000
8 737

12 478
26 449
86 642
23 569
37 243

18 147
35 153
94 070
32 569
45 980

0
6 426
6 669

1 105
1 172
1 055
977
873
848
801
690
232
324
254
287

1 584
920
488
700
988
519
488
431
596
401

479
434
197
501
245
211
197
202
234
223

40
188
139
148
40
144
139
119

260
92
64
52
260
92
64
52

300
280
203
200
300
236
203
171

269

299

29

29

1 497
0

930
2 486

173
175

198
203

198
203

788
236
162
126
121
112

555
469
356
285
202
190

177
203
134
99
61
59

20
102
58
49
32
25

18
50
49
47
30

20
120
108
98
79
55

0
12
0

0
0
0

0
4

0
54

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
2

44

0
22
0

7
45
105

0
280
0

5
0

22
124
11

2
0

0
7
652
7
0
7
652
7

44

25
21
23

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

53
41

56
36
33
44
52
40

49
63
55
44

27
35
33
34
34
32

52
26
29
37
25

49
33
38
41
40
41

57
65
57
52
56

25
27
43
44
40
38

56
50
57
61
61
61

47
21
30
31
31
32

100

41
56
68
58
47
62
62
62
28
45

52

62
0

59
33
31
31
37
37

European Region

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

197

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV
NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

YEAR

Slovenia

37

Spain

20

14

Sweden

Switzerland

19

Tajikistan

46

92

The Former
Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia

19

Turkey

45

22

Turkmenistan

63

64

Ukraine

32

74

United Kingdom of
Great Britain and
Northern Ireland

10

12

Uzbekistan

46

198

62

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
722
525
368
269
208
186
169
7 600
8 764
7 993
7 281
6 769
6 687
6 377
557
564
417
539
457
515
552
1 278
830
544
508
319
333
323
2 460
2 029
2 779
5 460
6 396
6 125
6 297
786
641
598
450
450
384
24 468
22 981
18 038
19 744
17 600
16 757
15 879
2 325
1 939
4 038
3 191
3 757
3 157
3 230
16 465
21 459
32 945
39 608
37 832
36 075
33 857
5 908
6 176
6 220
8 173
6 586
7 008
7 219
9 414
9 866
15 750
21 513
17 040
17 540
16 883

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

303
145
109
81
85
64

83
133
110
83
70
67

109
59
30
33
13
30

2 605
3 423
2 511
2 333
2 236
2 076

6 159
4 446
3 880
2 855
2 879
2 621

124
890
1 581
1 572
1 680

102
118
134
97
107
117

235
147
208
161
180
226

216
152
197
199
228
209

185
118
108
64
73
82

515
287
249
156
163
150

126
139
151
99
97
91

1 042
434
1 745
2 057
1 972
2 290

617
1 918
2 175
2 284
2 208
2 038

427
1 417
1 774
1 684
1 631

319
167
178
188
198
141

376
308
236
133
103
135

4 383
4 315
7 450
6 993
6 007
5 375

OTHER RELAPSE

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

0
12
0

30
31
20
11
6
8

16
9
5
2
3

30
47
29
16
8
11

0
0
0

0
1 078
461

0
1 078
461

324

324

11
0
0
0

40
30
37

11
40
30
37

52

52

5
0
0
0

102
118
54

5
102
118
54

41

41

123
246
261
338

2 066
1 600
272
647

2 189
1 846
533
985

1 085
697

66
150
141
106
116
92

0
0
0

25
16
43
23
33
16

0
60
33
23
36

25
16
103
56
56
52

0
0
0

17 534
8 544
5 944
4 325
4 289
4 191

1 064
4 371
5 359
5 442
5 647
5 617

0
0
0

808
991
840
814
696

1 559
849
631
643

808
2 550
1 689
1 445
1 339

3
14
29

544
1 017
995
1 331
1 370
1 153

1 327
2 709
1 498
1 293
1 223
1 248

1
241
656
611
564
473

393

67
71
42
129

1 894
100
152

67
1 965
142
281

82

82

8 263
10 738

9 793
17 258

1 514
1 739

1 889
3 210

1 889
3 210

14 574
13 632
9 976

17 505
15 934
17 599

3 660
3 858
3 355

365

2 093
2 651
2 562

2 826
2 552

2 093
5 477
5 114

1 204
1 821
1 286
1 256
1 201

4 162
2 037
2 752
2 221
2 462
2 551

2 014
2 478
3 600
3 033
3 262
3 443

46
28
24

0
0
0

0
460
413

0
460
413

576

576

1 656
2 032
688

2 735
3 825
5 695
5 117
4 959
4 711

5 798
10 142
7 857
6 640
6 943
6 735

1 333
1 760
6 324
4 214
4 667
4 288

324
7 378
4 018
1 480
3 447

347
9 015
5 087
2 451
4 596

136
2 433
0

0
370

35

274

0
0

23
1 637
1 069
971
1 149

0
0

984
905
388

58
112
71

143
221
185

370

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

78
52
50
49
55
49

30
43
39
45
44
44

30
45
39
38
37
34

26
29
30
29
31
35

63
18
45
47
47
53

46
35
43
59
66
51

20
34
56
62
58
56

29
27
40
51
53
48

46
38

45
46
36

37
40
37
34
32

32
27
42
44
42
41

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Albania

89

Andorra

100

Armenia

55

73

82

66

Austria

Azerbaijan

65

62

64

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

97

99

Bulgaria

85

Croatia

63

Cyprus

100

Czech Republic

60

Denmark

Estonia

59

68

Finland

France

Georgia

58

75

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

139
171
196
165
170
171
1
5
2
3
2
436
621
581
497
487
440
467
324
234
189
90
669
890
1 561
1 356
1 409
1 487
1 845
2 547
1 235
1 051
1 060
1 201
400
409
380
322
311
280
865
759
640
737
509
609
1 087
2 524
1 214
1 080
1 020
894
1 204
0
372
382
328
302
6
4
9
8
6
14
487
420
308
267
249
218
128
171
129
135
106
101
369
255
162
168
144
135
244
205
130
85
104
93
3 449
1 815
1 941
1 921
1 222
1 019
221
601
1 509
1 867
1 868
2 055

SIZE OF
COHORT

196
181
170
171
2
5
2
3
3
507
447
581
490
487
440
383
298
230
380
226
538
890
1 561
1 356
1 392
1 480

1 987
1 902
2 160
358
304
503
502
865
756
1 035
1 267
757
852

1 342
1 233
1 193
1 055

391
637
602
234
6
8
12
487
396
315
459
470

110
128
213
200

257
162
302
259
240

181
170
227

221
807
1 489
1 975
2 196
2 352

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100
110
100
100

200
100
100
100
150
116
72
100
99
100
100
82
92
98

251
80
100
100
100
99
100

189
179
180

88
80
156
161

100
100
162
172
149
140

111
114
117
118

105
167
184
77
100

89

200

100
94
102
172
189

64
99
158
189

101
100
180
180
178

213
163
244

100
134
99
106
118
114

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

43
50
52
64

35
35
39
25

4
4
4
2

2
2
1
1

5
4
2
4

11
5
4
4

80
100
33
33
52
81
59
55
62
60
2
0
17

50
0
0
67
67
2
6
13
15
11
12
81
73
58

0
0
0
0
8
4
3
6
5
7
10
9
7

0
0
0
0
36
3
5
11
6
3
0
0
0

50
0
0
0
0
1
7
14
12
10
8
7
6
7

0
20
0
0
0
0
0
4
1
7
10
1
11
11

7
8
58
89
48
49
48
47

40
59
7
0
11
8
8
15

10
9
1
4
3
3
3

13
0
12
2
4
2
2
7

9
8
19
3
12
11
10
16

21
16
4
4
22
27
29
12

67
68
64

7
3
0

9
9
10

10
7
4

2
3
1

6
10
20

25
21
16
20

41
45
52
55

10
10
8
7

1
0
4

17
0
9
9

6
24
15
4

97
77
93
93
87
97

1
18
3
4
5
2

0
1
1
1
4
0

1
1
0
1
1
0

1
2
0
1
1
0

1
1
2
1
1
0

82
77
79
78

3
2
5
7

4
7
6
9

2
0
2
2

7
8
6
4

1
6
1
1

40
49
46
48
100

7
12
11
15
0

7
13
18
26
0

0
0
3
0
0

1
1
2
3
0

45
24
19
7
0

38

25

13

33

25

25

17

17

57
59
62
69
67

3
11
10
3
1

0
17
6
19
21

3
1
0
1
3

2
1
2
7
6

35
11
20
1
2

37
44
26
16

49
39
53
25

5
6
5
1

0
1
1
1

0
2
1
1

9
8
13
57

67
70
60
59
58

2
2
2
1
1

11
8
14
15
15

1
1
1
18
2

6
10
10
6
6

12
10
15
1
18

43
46
33

27
26
34

19
16
17

1
6
0

1
1
1

9
5
14

41
38
60
60
53
57

18
25
13
17
20
19

8
3
3
2
3
3

3
9
5
6
12
12

29
25
13
9
8
7

2
0
7
6
4
3

European Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

199

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Germany

69

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

100

75

Ireland

66

Israel

86

Italy

80

Kazakhstan

62

Kyrgyzstan

82

61

75

Latvia

Lithuania

76

Luxembourg

100

Malta

100

80

Monaco

Montenegro

30

86

Netherlands

72

80

77

Norway

Poland

200

67

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

3 852
0
1 379
1 183
954
1 025

454
1 199
2 416
2 126
2 227

235
197
257
80
198
796
412
423
381
346
363
2
1
2
2
2
3

651
412
612
602
2
2
2
7
5
4

138
130
135
123
95

73
107
185
188
186

216
142
126
95
119
1 413
687
1 275
979
938
885
3 022
8 903
6 911
6 195
6 193
5 213
832
1 296
1 972
1 720
1 712
1 609
504
637
536
478
400
367
979
776
964
925
884
742

336
227
242
178
202
295
223
0

8 781
6 884
6 140
6 167
5 355
1 233
1 897
1 718
1 640
1 543
475
637
536
772
1 471
592
776
958
1 209
1 764
1 033
37

21
14
0
0

5
5
5
8
15
12

5
4
5
12
20
10

64
41
65
53
575
289
237
187
189
203
62
37
48
38
53
42
6 955
3 180
2 823
2 827
2 650
2 658

63
76
65
78
715
301
208
411
467
454
87
37
47
122
105

214
2 823
4 510
4 228
4 391

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

87
204
223
217

158
97
161
174

100
200
100
350
250
133

53
82
137
153
196

156
160
192
187
170
21
32

99
100
99
100
103

95
96
100
96
96
94
100
100
162
368
161

100
99
131
200
139

100
80
100
150
133
83

98
185
100
147
124
104
88
220
247
224
140
100
98
321
198

7
100
160
160
165

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

61
39
37
33
29

16
32
40
34
40

16
9
11
12
11

1
0
0
7
0

2
2
1
2
1

4
18
10
11
18

28
32
31
32

36
13
20
21

10
13
12
11

3
12
14
20

12
9
6
7

11
20
17
9

0
0
0
14

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

100
100
100
71
80
75

0
0
0
14
20
25

33
3
0
7
0

51
62
70
69
66

12
9
5
7
9

0
3
0
0

4
1
2
2
1

0
22
23
15
24

65
69
64
78
72
73
37

18
15
16
11
14
6
36

15
11
12
10
10
3
1

0
0
0
0
0
2
0

0
3
2
1
1
11
9

1
2
5
1
3
4
16

76
70
69
64
62

3
1
0
0
0

5
5
4
4
4

10
12
20
26
30

3
5
5
4
3

3
8
3
2
2

73
81
81
80
79
61
68
72
80
32
72

9
4
4
5
4
0
4
1
2
0
3

3
3
3
3
3
9
12
11
7
4
9

4
5
4
6
4
3
3
1
0
5
1

5
5
6
5
6
21
7
7
4
2
5

6
2
2
2
4
7
7
8
7
57
11

73
70
70
51
76
100

0
0
31
0
0

10
11
12
7
10
0

4
3
1
3
2
0

12
11
7
7
9
0

2
6
10
0
4
0

80
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
15
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
8

20
100
100
75
60
80

0
0
0
17
25
20

10
17
52
49
17
23
9
17
14
11
43
49
62
54
62

21
62
32
37
55
53
75
62
71
69
34
22
30
25
22

3
5
8
8
6
7
5
7
9
14
14
2
2
6

0
0
0

0
1
3
0
0
4

0
2
4
5
3
1
2
1
3
8
3
4
0

70
18
9
3
15
15
8
14
7
8
0
11
2
19
7

50
65
62
54
48

22
12
14
20
19

11
5
6
7
5

6
1
0
0
0

6
9
10
10
10

5
8
7
9
17

0
0
0

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Portugal

69

Republic of
Moldova

53

51

85

65

55

Romania

Russian
Federation

San Marino

Serbia

85

85

Serbia &
Montenegro
Slovakia

64

82

90

87

Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

85

Switzerland

Tajikistan

88

81

70

90

The Former
Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia

Turkey

91

73

84

83

60

Turkmenistan

Ukraine

United Kingdom of
Great Britain and
Northern Ireland

Uzbekistan

78

81

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

2 019
1 863
1 302
1 173
1 053
1 043
665
651
1 696
1 610
1 533
1 318
10 469
10 202
10 801
9 425
9 511
8 987
37 512
27 467
32 605
33 103
33 949
33 351

1 240
1 924
1 393
1 694
1 683

651
1 690
1 599
1 533
1 318
11 597
10 158
10 929
11 245
10 082
10 737
54
3 616
25 692
31 857
32 356
32 316

1 105
1 146
1 172
1 055
1 497
0
788
236
162
176
126
121
303
145
109
90
81
85
2 605
3 423
2 511
2 317
2 333
2 236
102
118
134
96
97
107
185
118
108
95
64
73
1 042
434
1 745
2 228
2 057
1 972
319
167
178
200
188
198
4 383
4 315
7 450
7 527
6 993
6 007
544
1 017
995
1 378
1 331
1 370
8 263
10 738

1 154
1 145
1 391
1 137
1 956
267
807
238
158
304
498
174
270
145
109
148
159
149

61
103
107
144
160

100
100
99
100
100
111
100
101
119
106
119
0
13
79
96
95
97

100

104
100
119
108
131

102
101
98
173
395
144
89
100
100
164
196
175

95
99
247
228
238

33
153
99
93
99
100
70
91
101
99
100
101

80
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
93
100
100
116

100
99
96

74
138
506

95
27
94
100
100
100

11 028
14 574
13 632
1 204
1 821
1 639
1 286
1 256
2 735
3 825
5 695
6 326
5 117
4 959

112
133
237
221
255

348
665
1 729
2 073
2 044
1 972
222
152
179
197
188
199
3 461
7 450
7 510
6 993
6 007
544
1 017
995
1 288
1 331
1 375
9 564

11 068
14 407
13 111

1 348
2 266
6 510
2 598
1 030
5 336
6 326
5 117
4 959

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

45
9
13
12
11

23
71
76
75
77

4
6
6
5

4
0
0
0
3

4
5
4
3
2

19
9
2
5
7

1
60
54
54
49
38
28
71
72
72
72
54
64
55
55
54
52

62
2
8
7
5
13
42
11
13
13
14
11
4
3
3
3
3

0
9
10
11
10
6
4
5
4
5
4
15
6
13
12
12
11

0
11
16
8
17
7
8
4
4
4
4
6
13
14
16
18
20

0
11
11
12
14
6
8
6
5
5
6
11
9
11
10
9
8

37
7
0
8
6
31
9
4
3
2
1
4
4
4
5
4
5

100

72
77
80
81
34
82
64
81
66
86
47
82
64
33
47
27
38
24

13
7
6
4
18
7

1
2
2
1
3
0

0
26
0
46
0
26
51
38
55
42
63

5
6
7
7
2
4
16
14
6
12
5
14
4
8
12
11
15
9

1
0
0
1
0
2
0
0
0
1
1

5
4
4
5
10
6
4
2
1
2
1
2
1
5
1
3
2
1

4
3
2
2
33
1
16
1
1
1
0
2
3
3
3
5
2
3

0
0
0
0

79
74
66
87
85

11
6
7
6
6

0
1
0
1
0

2
1
1
1
1

8
18
26
4
8

69
74
74
78
76
75
61
51
62
74
81
85

18
3
9
5
7
6
9
35
22
13
7
5

7
15
4
5
4
4
13
4
2
10
7
4

3
8
6
6
7
8
9
2
0
2
1
2

2
0
7
5
5
5
9
7
14
1
2
5

0
0
0
2
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0

0
45
60
59
61
55
79
70
79
83
83
83

73
44
32
33
30
18
2
14
5
1
1

3
2
3
3
3
11
9
6
5
6
5
6

0
0
1
1
1
7
6
4
6
6
6
7

6
5
3
3
2
2
3
5
5
5
5

19
3
2
2
3
7
1
1
1
1
1
4

54
56
52

5
6
7

14
12
13

12
12
16

10
9
8

5
5
3

0
0

68
77
78

7
7
4

0
0

1
1
1

24
16
16

78
27
72
72
75
77

0
53
9
7
6
5

9
3
6
7
6
6

7
6
6
6
6
5

4
5
7
6
4
5

3
6
1
2
3
3

European Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

201

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Albania

76

Andorra

100

Armenia

50

63

Austria

41

Azerbaijan

53

42

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

84

Bulgaria

70

Croatia

50

Cyprus

Czech Republic

Denmark

Estonia

51

Finland

36

France

Georgia

32

202

60

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

53
19
43
25
32
21

30
25
28
21

0
0
1
0
2
38
76
327
596
618
542

1
0
2
6
54
327
590
534
542

30
26
63
25
47
74
3 200
2 903
3 733
2 384
343
825
1 049
884
849
878
80
89
68
73
67
130
193
156
183
67
113
383
201
309
313
372
42

10
27
11
37
74
1 314
1 081
3 084
1 687

862
815
616
55
47
72
42

122
106
156
77
116

198
301
500
384

94
98
36
62
0
0
3
1
3
3
21
25
34
81
61

92

22

2
5

38
31
76
56

6
28
29
36
37
10
71
116
94
78
90
80

15
22
36
32

59
89
79
88
82

29
22
14
19

15
14
14

0
371
385
379
196
681
2 152
1 845
1 677
566

298
470
2 037
1 847
1 542
1 521

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

70
100
88
100

100

100
16
71
100
99
86
100

33
104

148

100
41
37
83
71

98
96
70

62
69
99
63

63
68
85
115
103

99
97
160
103

98

35

67

167

152
91
94
92

54
76
100
86

51
95
101
98
103

107
74

152
69
95
100
92
269

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

37
24
39
38

37
60
36
38

3
4
14
10

0
8
4
0

10
4
4
10

13
0
4
5

0
50
52
13
12
15
9

100

100
0
15
28
34
36
54

0
0
7
7
11
8
8

0
17
7
12
12
15
4

0
33
19
37
30
21
15

0
0
0
4
2
5
10

0
11

80
56

0
11

0
0

0
11

20
11

9
3

27
38

9
5

36
0

30

18
24

59
28
32
18
39

7
9
12
32
14

5
6
5
4
6

11
6
6
6
9

14
13
15
23
19

4
38
29
17
13

30
29
38

32
30
4

9
9
13

18
8
7

5
3
1

6
20
37

16
17
15
7

45
21
19
48

13
19
8
10

0
0
14

15
0
6
19

11
43
51
2

79
85
85
70
52

15
8
7
5
32

3
4
3
22
5

1
1
2
1
3

2
2
2
1
3

0
1
1
0
5

57
22
16
32

10
37
7
38

7
16
4
12

11
1
3
5

14
12
5
8

2
12
65
5

20

13

57

27

23

36

100

40

20

53
16
39
46

11
39
37
16

8
3
12
21

3
0

27
27
11
16

60
64
39
44

7
5
17

54
21
37
36
34

2
20
15
10
17

33
36
29

8
23
19
23
20
26

0
40

0
3
7
5

26
39
5
5

0
0

0
5
3
3

7
0
31
38

3
3
8
9
15

0
4
4
23
6

3
26
18
20
9

37
25
19
1
20

13
21
7

7
21
0

47
21
64

24
31
35
33
29
34

12
10
7
9
6
5

9
8
10
11
23
17

45
29
23
15
14
15

2
0
6
9
7
3

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Germany

59

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

100

Ireland

60

Israel

67

Italy

48

Kazakhstan

48

Kyrgyzstan

71

Latvia

45

Lithuania

35

Luxembourg

Malta

50

Monaco

Montenegro

20

73

Netherlands

71

Norway

Poland

62

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

493
533
441
252
48
74
70
84
3

SIZE OF
COHORT

63
432
489
190
316

371
347
328
285
211
0
1
1
2
0
1

122
333
319
126

22
40
51
41
16

10
14
50
51
52

8
7
8
4
9

8
7
8
4
9
31
26

625
293
1 772
292
1 320
5 093
15 009
14 143
9 229
9 371
127
555
847
1 040
756
758
118
375
205
176
152
147
128
509
460
426
357
404

1
2
1
1

2 901
4 085
18 722
8 662
9 392
278
845
1 035
897
924
205
205
176
293
148
282
455
426
354
404

4
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
7
2

1
1
0
4
2

27
22
10
11

10
23
10
11

70
44
44
49
46
28
12
14
24
27

18
28
55
47
49

1 071
882
1 077
1 047
1 020
688

3
9
25
28

56
985
1 038
720
942

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

88
92
43
125

33
96
97
44

100

100

100

45
35
98
124
325

100
100
100
100
100

57
27
132
94
100

50
100
100
119
122

55
100
100
193
101

55
99
100
99
100

100
0
57
100

37
105
100
100

26
64
125
96
107

25
64
104
104

6
91
99
71
137

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

51
30
27
30
19

21
36
41
29
40

16
9
13
8
13

3
0
1
9
0

5
7
5
5
5

5
18
13
18
22

16
12
11
29

20
37
39
14

15
13
15
10

9
8
10
28

11
11
8
9

30
18
17
10

100

50
100
100

50
0
0

40
7
0
6
0

0
57
62
45
60

10
7
16
6
8

10
0
0
0

40
0
2
2
0

0
29
20
41
33

13
71
75
0
56
42
31

25
14
25
75
11
6
15

63
14
0
0
11
26
4

0
0
0
0
0
10
12

0
0
0
25
0
13
8

0
0
0
0
22
3
31

62
46
24
24
22

4
1
29
18
27

10
13
9
10
9

14
14
25
32
34

5
6
9
7
6

5
19
4
8
3

59
40
34
36
28

15
31
34
34
43

8
8
8
6
7

8
9
8
10
6

6
11
13
9
7

4
1
4
4
9

39
50
54
28
43

2
1
4
0
1

19
10
9
7
14

3
1
1
13
0

8
9
11
2
14

29
29
22
50
28

45
27
30
40
35

0
2
0

21
25
28
22
24

8
4
5
18
4

22
22
21
19
22

5
19
17
1
15

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

100
100

50
50

0
0

50
50

4
70
45

20
52
10
27

20
13
10
9

0
0
0

0
10
0

60
30
0
18

28
11
5
6
4

22
68
67
32
67

6
4
4
6
2

0
0
4
0

6
7
0
2
4

39
11
20
53
22

33
44
28
29

0
33
28
43

67
22
8
7

0
0
0
14

0
0
0

0
0
36
7

64
22
35
43
30

13
31
31
21
32

14
6
7
7
5

0
0
0
1
0

4
32
18
16
14

5
9
8
12
18

European Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

203

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Portugal

55

Republic of
Moldova

33

Romania

57

Russian
Federation

58

34

San Marino

Serbia

73

74

Serbia &
Montenegro
Slovakia

82

Slovenia

88

Spain

Sweden

69

Switzerland

Tajikistan

72

The Former
Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia

79

Turkey

73

Turkmenistan

Ukraine

47

United Kingdom of
Great Britain and
Northern Ireland

Uzbekistan

204

69

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

268
481
350
307
292
271
148
374
1 777
2 201
1 865
1 663
1 077
3 770
6 938
6 239
6 012
5 401

133
209
293
305
178

50
43
84
99
61

0
96
98
100
100

69
97
95
77
100

9
31
19
19
51

95
113
110
101

10

38
94
99
173
100

51
93
100
138
100

23
53
113
76

80
100
102
304

94
103
100
100

62
100
100
101

25
100
33
262

91
342
190

32
99

220
44
100
99
100

18 147
35 153
96 557
94 070
32 569

1
1 713
2 167
1 865
1 663
2 605
6 737
5 930
4 656
5 391
12
1 694
10 855
18 527
18 070
16 726

300
314
280
203
198
203
20
120
108
97
98
79
30
47
29
18
16
8

284
355
309
205
21
46
101
96
170
79
24
27
18
22
8

0
1 078
420
461

11
40
30
32
37

9
16
36
28
45

5
102
118
53
54
370
2 189
2 003
1 846
533
25
16
103
69
56
56
808
2 550
1 885
1 689
1 445
67
1 965
142
351
281

1 762
1 995
1 881
1 618

97
71
56
56

1 593
1 885
1 692
1 459
495
142
116
737

1 889
3 210
5 752
2 093
5 477

5 240
7 152
10 424

0
460
436
413

147
433

347
9 015
4 617
5 087
2 451

764
3 999
4 617
5 046
2 451

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

38
10
8
8
7

17
66
66
64
69

6
4
10
7

6
0
1
0
5

9
7
9
9
7

24
14
6
12
12

0
22
18
16
29

0
19
18
18
4

0
13
14
18
15

100
16
29
12
26

0
17
20
20
19

0
13
1
16
8

24
39
36
40
38
42
25
33
33
33
31

20
13
16
10
19
17
24
4
3
3
3

9
10
11
10
10
25
10
16
14
13
13

20
10
12
14
12
8
21
26
28
29
32

17
14
15
17
16
8
9
16
15
14
12

11
14
11
8
4
0
11
5
7
7
9

46
46
49
60

26
27
27
14

10
8
10
9

2
2
1
0

12
15
7
12

3
3
6
4

67

10

10

14

78
50
40
28
34

0
38
47
20
48

11
7
4
5
14

2
0
1
1
1

4
3
3
1
0

4
3
5
46
3

29
44
44
5
13

46
41
39
32
75

4
4
17
9
0

0
0
0
14
0

13
4
0
0

8
7
0
41
13

0
0
0

0
0
6
4
13

0
0
0
7
0

11
0
3

78
75
67
75
69

11
25
25
14
11

29
33
32
29

47
42
43
43

9
9
9
11

8
7
8
10

6
8
6
6

1
1
2
1

24
27
34
39

33
38
38
39

7
17
11
7

2
4
2
2

32
7
13
11

2
7
4
2

24
34
30
29

46
42
44
44

5
6
4
3

2
2
2
2

12
10
9
9

11
6
10
13

66
42
41
63

9
26
1
18

7
13
17
7

11
10
16
7

6
9
23
5

1
0
3
0

20
31
18

35
10
29

13
16
14

14
21
22

11
13
12

7
8
5

0
0

57
71

4
8

0
0

3
2

36
19

20
28
18
24
30

55
41
57
48
39

8
9
8
10
11

8
7
4
7
7

9
14
9
9
9

0
1
3
3
5

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

YEAR

Albania

15

42

Andorra

Armenia

12

70

Austria

Azerbaijan

Belarus

93

Belgium

82

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

Bulgaria

67

Croatia

Cyprus

Czech Republic

19

Denmark

Estonia

94

90

Finland

France

Georgia

10

30

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

91

Ireland

16

85

90

Israel

Italy

Kazakhstan

77

84

Kyrgyzstan

104

Latvia

85

80

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS
15
41
47
42

0
0
0
12
16
26
70

59

95
95
93
82
91
91

1
23
40
67

0
72

19
20
23

48
61

94
90
92
90
1
1

10
25
22
30

91
83
58

6
19
26
16
85
88
83
90

77
98
97
84

91
104
104
85
85
85
80

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

81
177
211
186
0
0
0
270
335
521
1 242

5 945

5 227
5 227
5 153
937
913
930

0
23
732
1 155
1 773

0
36

189
174
161

177
207
0
490
401
380
295
3
5

674
1 482
1 289
1 723

0
10
5
7
28
89
125
68
316
283
288
308

31 187
28 237
29 597
23 854
6 508
6 617
6 569
1 226
910
830
748

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)
540
434
447
440
10
4
9
7
2 322
2 125
2 006
1 780
954
707
688
7 920
10 078
10 417
8 394
6 357
5 483
5 511
5 554
1 144
1 006
1 020
2 160
1 736
1 772
1 390
3 302
3 151
2 911
2 649
1 144
980
855
695
37
50
55

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE
1
4
6
0
0
0
0
6
12
17
17

139
156
190
187
52
56
43

1
0
0
0
1
2
0
1
2

1 007
868
702

2
7
5

424
367
339

8
11
9
0
33
42
40
34
3
6
6
4

519
444
411
329
361
350
533
327
5 374
5 812
2 890
6 448
5 836
5 978
5 796
6 045
4 474
4 432
4 302
767
669
588
2 024
1 606
1 448
11
6
12
22
461
470
488
428
372
322
347
343
4 137
4 418
3 877
2 495
40 429
28 913
30 578
28 550
6 765
7 127
6 358
6 295
1 443
1 070
977
934

13
20
33
30

2
2
1
1
1
0
11
18
11
12
17
12
22
13

183
238
325
333
117
88
183
53
72
73
71

1
2
3
0

2
4
3
1

3
4
4
6
6
5

0
0
0

1
4
3

6
4

7
10
11
12
100
120

2
1
3
2

10
20
0

39
20
9
18
5
4
8
4

1
1
1
1

2
1
3
4
8
9
9

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

100
67

83
67
53
47

0
0

50

54
85
55
73

100

41
15
11
26

100
70

100
100

33
8
35
41

100

0
100

50

33
58
47

100
85
55
73

100

100
36

8
12
7
8

22
37
55
29
60
76

2
3
5
0
0

1
0

62

257

0
0

1
0

0
0

301

European Region

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

656
1 027
1 063

58

0
0

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

205

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

YEAR

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Malta

81

Monaco

Montenegro

74

22

34

Netherlands

Norway

Poland

Portugal

70

Republic of
Moldova
103

93

Romania

37

34

55

123

Russian
Federation

San Marino

Serbia

95

96

38

76

Slovakia

Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Tajikistan

53

100

95

The Former
Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia
Turkey

Turkmenistan

Ukraine

United Kingdom of
Great Britain and
Northern Ireland
Uzbekistan

124

206

100

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS

4
85
86
81

5
55
76
74
22
29
33
34

0
0
0
70
88
53

103
89
91
93
37
25
28
34
55
103
131
123

0
0
0
1
95
85
99
96
38
62
71
76

49
47

9
49
50
53
0
20
9
9

0
0
4

100

94
86
95

0
124
100
100
100

1
45
38
26

8
73
91
84
252
285
380
370

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)
2 574
2 250
2 081
1 938
37
28
27
29
23
53
44
32

1
170
133
120
114
1 157
997
1 160
1 073
290
324
363

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE
7
21
14
19

5
4
3

0
0
0
1
61
39
42
47

35
27
22
2 485
2 648
1 520

9 280
8 081
8 236
7 509
3 536
2 995
2 871

35
27
22
571
442
349

6 469
5 171
5 107
5 068
10 860
6 123
6 443
7 121
85 537
221 889
204 624
199 445

6 278
5 838
5 591
5 444
29 347
24 786
23 267
21 078
154 379
214 905
156 222
162 553

9
260
260
300
160
202
214
229
3 533
6 083
9 253
10 617

3
5
5
12
720
537
500
420
107
131
134
130

3 468
2 813
2 595
2 385
760
633
506
439
278
213
188
172
8 359
8 214
7 592
7 089
569
552
627
675
626
516
554
549
7 526
7 996
7 482
7 641
658
483
473
420
21 303
18 452
17 402
16 551
3 291
3 909
3 157
3 230
39 608
37 832
38 901
36 409
8 633
8 655
9 040
8 483
28 891
21 194
21 453
20 330

3
5
5
12
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
1

3 991
3 599

670
3 949
3 714
4 049
2
99
43
38
0
1
581

3 230
35 739
33 424
34 621

0
35 801
21 194
21 453
20 330

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

508
425

1
48
49
100
2
2
0
0

1
14
0
0
1 526
3 375
3 771
4 501
553
0
147
256
357
427

11
11
12

0
0
0
1
24
14
11
13

100
100
100
23
17
23

0
5
5
6
1
3
3
3
4
3
5
5

100
100
100
100
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1

13
12

0
1
1
2
100
2
0
0

100
2

9
11
13

0
1
2
2

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

60

54

99

10

38
43

433

0
0

0
23
0
0

36

63
57

0
35
25
92

100

100

249

100
100

28

32

80
82
88

23
77
82

400
100

100

100
100

0
35
45
42
100
100

64

36
32
50

0
30
10
37

0
0

0
0

90
54
21

0
188
188
133
6 933
10 451

0
4
0
0
0

23
0
0
0
0
0

2 763
4 980
5 029

1 046
1 056

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

Albania

Andorra

Armenia

Austria

Azerbaijan

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

Bulgaria

Croatia

Cyprus

Czech Republic

Denmark

Estonia

Finland

France

Georgia

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

Ireland

Israel

Italy

Kazakhstan

Kyrgyzstan

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED

1
2
0
2
0
0
0
0
162
128
156
177
13

497
402
416
415
10
4
7
7
1 995
1 507
1 464
1 329
928

161
192
119
186
9
3
2
4
576
417
480
471
570

22
15
800

265
240
453

923
1 342
1 576
11
22
10

437
358
4 720
5 130
5 872
5 237
5 308
4 634
4 633
4 345
1 076
811
806

11
12
2
2
47
32
43
56
6
4
7
0
1
1
4

2 004
1 663
1 659
1 289
3 101
2 838
2 526
2 301
1 050
944
793
652
34
41
41

1 035
757
854
600
482
833
716
801
586

13
11
8

973
807
638

562
483
413

5
2
2

395
330
288

307
253
209

79
74
86
63
3
1
6
6
24
27
30

425
354
331
250
339
331
519
312
4 887
3 355
2 890

316
272
245
197
198
238
295
239
1 291
1 313
2 890

195
481
369
359
105
45
61
43
12

799
1 685
1 777
1 987
3 094
2 360
2 343
2 138
497

14

4 294
4 148
4 457
4 383
5 391
3 561
3 545
3 350
626
534
464

26
16
20

1 677
1 321
1 230

442
509
486

0
1
0
0
3
3
0
2
16
13
6
12

10
6
10
22
385
336
333
319
365
318
338
339
3 828
3 414
2 541
1 721
22 303
19 684
16 810
15 641
5 918
6 230
5 434
5 308

7
5
6
19
200
114
162
176
259
226
258
245

552

3 676
3 644
7 387
989
269
785
566

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

801
1 802
2 071
1 972
588
630
621

476
16
29
27

140

5 605
4 140
5 214
837
484
677
225

32
48
29
45
90
75
29
57
29
28
33
35
61

61
67
10

15

39
45
45
55
78
77

52
46
51
47
16
29
28
35
56

60

47
71
66

58
60
65

78
77
73

74
77
74
79
58
72
57
77
26
39
100

19
41
40
45
57
66
66
64
79

30

26
39
40

70
83
60
86
52
34
49
55
71
71
76
72

28
25
33
14
8
12
4

NOTIFIED

0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
86
60
80
59
11

43
32
21
25
0
0
2
0
327
618
542
451
26

5
5
270

25
29
3 200
3 733
2 384
1 997
1 049
849
878
1 114
68
67

93
301
464
507
7
15
4
4
3
0
1
22
14
12
16
3
4
7

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB
12
22
9
19
0
1
0
182
190
200
220
16
23
16
366

960
1 230
1 754
1 697
41
48
56

156
67
113
101
201
313
372
348
94
36
62
43
3
3
3

106
77
66
47
691
105
128
165
61

7
10
5

34
61

20
37
39

5
0
1

29
37
10

18
28
33

42
42
54
36
2
1
6
5
14
16
13

94
90
80
79
22
19

71
75
62
61
22
9
7
8
112
104
106

1
0
4

54
190
183
188
57
16
39
27
12

15
371
379

41
0
3
4

515
720
594
558
251
219
151
130
0

2 152
1 677
566
1 409
493
441
252
281
74
84
3

13
8
16

347
285
211

88
102
55

0
1
0
0
1
2
0
2
14
12
4
12

1
0
1
0
40
41
16
31
7
4
9
4
293
292

1
0
1
0
10
8
12
21
6
3
8
2

1 384
981
1 408
169
97
225
225

71
15 009
9 229
9 371
9 213
847
756
758
987

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

14

4 474
4 413
4 655
152
325
263
264

28
69
43
76

50

56
31
37
49
62

92
55
11

48

145
200
152
60
72

68
115
58
47
344
34
34
47
65

66

0
100
133

59
61

62
76
330

76
83
78
77
100
47

53
30
27

24
43
105
40
51
50
60
46
0

467

25
36
26

100

100

25
20
75
68
86
75
89
50

48
47
51
18
43
35
27

1
1
0
1
0
0
0
76
68
76
118
2
8
3
58

459
516
840
1 021
3
6
3
7
9
2
1
25
18
31
40
3
0
0
1
0
6
1
3
0
0
1
37
32
32
27
1
0
1
8
10
14
141
290
185
171
31
24
16
8
0
4
13
8
4

European Region

YEAR

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa

0
0
0
1
0
0
2
1
2
0

1 950
2 329
2 099
96
172
161
264

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

207

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

YEAR
Latvia

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Malta

Monaco

Montenegro

Netherlands

Norway

Poland

Portugal

Republic of
Moldova

Romania

Russian
Federation

San Marino

Serbia

Slovakia

Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Tajikistan

The Former
Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia
Turkey

Turkmenistan

Ukraine

United Kingdom of
Great Britain and
Northern Ireland
Uzbekistan

208

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa
160
129
131
87
338
276
322
310
0

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED
1 238
918
830
825
2 114
1 892
1 677
1 573
37
0

873
684
618
613
1 293
1 259
1 074
998
36

0
0
0
1
0
1

24
21
46
41
20

17
11
22
17
11

2
0
1
0
7
13
20
11
3
4
8

1
143
123
108
102
1 113
948
1 094
1 013
269
252
258

1
82
75
80
61
709
696
720
741
193
180
210

72
52
0
30
28
28
22

8 203
7 061
7 268
6 610
3 181
2 703
2 600

5 409
3 758

338
1 048
1 069
1 015
530
816
435
501

4 501
3 951
3 804
3 745
22 407
18 774
17 866
15 963
119 226
120 835
117 227
109 904

6 960
14 686
13 692

9
16

39
38

3 168
2 526
1 740
2 178
652
510
406
361
249
197
180
161
7 281
6 769
6 687
6 377
539
457
515
552
508
319
333
323
5 337
6 150
5 864
5 959
555
427
417
368
18 753
16 760
15 943
15 183
3 149
3 628
3 157
3 148

3 482
5 336
39
53
58
60
86
342
654
1 023

35 739
33 424
31 295
8 173
6 586
7 008
7 219
19 876
15 971
16 569
15 734

9
8
4
1
1
1
2
1
0
76
56
49
4
12
13
18
5
5
9

319
333
4
2
1
7
191
263
222
250

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

3 229
1 407
1 496
1 391
536
1 212
1 284
1 234
1 594
3 025
2 226
3 336
36 249
36 888
35 862

1 112
923

248
300
191
185
217
182
167
146
1 080
1 147
1 009
425
349
424
440
326
258
269
270

833
160
106
130
191
153
3 237
4 212
3 714
4 342

164
81

12 007
9 194
3 428
3 749
3 957
3 970
0
274
571
2 845

71
75
74
74
61
67
64
63
97

71
52
48
41
55

100
57
61
74
60
64
73
66
73
72
71
81

66
53

49
44
55
54

12
31
34
33
7
16
12
21

30
31
33

35
37

38
59
47
51
87
92
93
91

16
17
16
79
76
82
80
64
81
81
84

14
3
19
30
46
42
17
25
23
29

5
3

36
29
42
57
56
55
0
2
3
18

NOTIFIED

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

94
83
83
63
127
113
114
128
0

205
152
147
109
460
357
404
364
0
0

182
144
134
102
440
356
404
364

0
0
0
0
0

0
1
7
2
3

0
0
0
0
5
11
16
10
3
1
8

27
10
11
12
44
49
46
43
14
27

14
9
9
12
30
32
30
29
8
14
20

18
0
13
12
19
13
68
300
289
314
95
130
91
96
5 061
5 816
6 218

4
6

4
1
0
0
1
1
0
31
6
20
2
7
8
11
2
3
1

62
92
0
0
0
2
101
125
99
110

21
19

1 437
1 492
23
38
37
42
0
52
115
430

1 077
1 020
688
899
350
292
271
1 777
1 865
1 663
1 688
6 938
6 012
5 401
5 115
35 153
94 070
32 569
45 980

300
280
203
200
108
98
79
55
29
16
8
11
1 078
461
324
30
37
52
118
54
41
2 189
1 846
533
985
103
56
56
52
2 550
1 689
1 445
1 339
142
281
82
2 093
5 477
5 114
460
413
576
9 015
5 087
2 451
4 596

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

3
0
2

607
468
172
145
148
652
1 227
1 129
1 077
1 300
2 522
1 641
2 004
6 404
6 798
13 405

121
130

56
62
36
32
28
13
8
9
174
383
110
17
30
35
30
30
34
41
33

580
223
19
17
28
28
508
740
599
615

111
63

6 348
4 840
271
186
364
247
435
470
732
1 180

89
95
91
94
96
100
100
100

43
0
67

52
90
82
100
68
65
65
67
57
52

60

52
49
50
55

37
66
68
64
19
42
30
39

7
21
29

40
46

52
63
46
58
97
81
100
82

38

34
57
81

58
25
63

80

109
23
18
30
50
54
20
44
41
46

77

116
95
59
45

43
5
9
30
26

66
46
48
24
209
162
208
181

0
0
0
1

2
0
1
0
1
2
3
1
0
2
0

34
0
17
16
9
9
270
748
780
701
435
686
344
405
1 899
2 314
6 169

5
10

4
2
1
1
1
1
0
0
23
45
13
2
4
4
7
2
1
3

257
174
4
2
1
5
90
138
123
140

18
19

2 045
3 844
7
7
12
11
86
290
539
593

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[

Albania

Andorra

Armenia

Austria

Azerbaijan

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

Bulgaria

Croatia

Cyprus

Czech Republic

Denmark

Estonia

Finland

France

Georgia

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

Ireland

Israel

Italy

Kazakhstan

Kyrgyzstan

FEMALE
UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

0
2
0
0

0
19
26
28

0
21
21
17

0
14
16
14

19
24
31
16

40
19
20
16

30
16
37
15

0
0
0
1
2
3
0
4
1
1
0
0
0
77
0

0
0
0
18
152
170
36
37
17
32
4
13
9
109
328

1
1
0
16
130
104
75
95
30
23
4
29
24
297
371

0
1
0
11
131
83
49
82
59
22
12
14
33
215
267

0
0
0
10
63
84
68
89
42
41
13
6
42
209
280

0
0
0
8
26
30
27
71
23
24
8
4
30
187
30

0
0
0
1
21
24
15
73
41
30
10
1
0
88
27

0
3
3
1

71
65
23
20
26

180
173
49
57
50

273
224
63
39
32

287
293
52
55
27

118
163
54
32
15

62
58
102
56
47

0
4
1
1

15
56
22
27

61
82
58
37

90
99
61
34

140
66
78
61

139
58
44
46

100
77
80
51

0
9
1
6

13
98
40
38

16
150
115
97

20
195
143
210

3
195
133
132

9
150
90
178

10
136
65
141

1
0
0

24
10
1

27
19
1

48
18
0

72
38
1

47
25
1

34
24
2

0
0
0

9
15
3

11
13
14

20
9
16

13
10
7

2
5
2

7
16
11

13
15
5

8
14
13

4
6
9

0
0
0
1
0
0
0
36
18
16

9
6
3
1
1
3
3
138
108
104

11
11
5
6
5
4
2
226
127
134

14
8
3
7
3
1
4
176
89
82

2
1
4
5
17

8
49
109
135
115

17
37
105
118
251

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

0
3
0
2

1
11
3
11

0
10
9
7

0
8
5
6

13
8
5
3

20
5
5
2

16
11
18
8

0
0

0
0
1
1
3
1
6
1
0
1
0
0
90
3

1
0
1
24
27
24
22
11
13
5
5
3
64
141

1
0
7
27
21
17
52
22
11
4
18
3
98
100

1
0
2
24
10
4
32
12
8
2
0
6
47
57

0
0
1
8
11
7
21
11
3
2
0
3
32
73

0
0
1
8
4
8
18
6
5
5
0
0
24
9

0
0

0
0

4
7
8
59
22
10
6
0
0
24
18

1
3
6
2

25
28
12
15
27

53
52
24
15
31

50
56
32
19
15

43
37
17
4
12

11
28
10
13
4

62
91
34
27
23

1
0

0
4
2
0

40
30
35
27

67
46
39
19

64
29
33
16

49
29
28
10

77
48
28
18

23
124
130
94

0
0

0
9
3
10

11
90
42
50

14
111
59
57

7
59
43
57

3
29
23
38

4
37
15
60

6
70
34
130

1
1
0

12
3
1

18
8
1

15
4
1

11
2
2

6
1
0

56
30
1

19
7
5

88
57
28

3
7
3

2
8
5

11
11
3
4
4
0
1
90
46
56

4
6
6
10
6
6
2
92
43
38

10
8
3
65
49
20
11
365
155
180

17
33
58
62
167

18
17
46
52
89

7
10
17
28
104

5
5
47
41
397

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

2
0
0

10
7
8

22
31
24

83
52
57

88
89
55

53
61
45

90
59
46

0
5
0

7
10
12

16
20
12

28
24
18

18
16
23

9
11
9

11
14
7

0
0
0
1
0
1
0
30
10
12

6
9
3
1
3
5
10
156
136
127

31
25
7
10
8
4
6
431
248
212

53
19
21
25
22
3
8
502
247
222

56
40
25
28
19
14
9
414
211
196

35
12
12
24
28
11
8
297
125
134

15
7
8
61
53
25
18
496
244
205

2
4
0
5
14

20
76
226
340
179

30
111
272
529
453

25
113
268
341
539

40
63
207
264
460

18
45
76
143
442

12
28
60
77
625

6
1

59
49

113
94

171
99

167
147

92
89

167
146

0
0

4
3

51
45

104
69

73
61

43
36

37
30

103
75

0
0

1
1

10
14

22
25

32
22

24
14

19
12

46
23

0
0

2
13

9
18

10
8

5
7

6
2

25
17

0
0

8
6

24
24

85
67

104
117

58
67

27
39

1
1

7
5

17
13

19
11

22
22

10
15

30
33

0
0

0
1

1
0

0
3

0
0

1
0

0
0

0
0

0
1
0
1

0
0

0
0
0
0

0
1

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
1
0

10
6
8

7
10
18

7
21
4

6
10
12

4
7
5

12
6
11

0
0

0
0
0

13
9
7

8
10
7

13
3
2

6
3
3

7
0
2

15
8
5

0
0

0
1
1
9
12
8
15

20
4
13
59
63
93
38

26
15
28
202
96
191
70

23
18
12
157
75
137
69

23
15
8
94
58
101
39

13
5
4
124
54
61
30

38
26
6
289
112
115
71

3
0
0
7
6
3
16

10
6
1
52
38
80
27

16
14
8
93
58
145
47

6
7
10
57
33
56
45

3
7
2
40
13
25
29

3
5
0
51
19
19
17

32
19
10
168
39
70
58

36
31
15
3
4
1
5

1 057
917
675
109
128
247
261

1 409
1 142
754
171
227
303
260

1 379
983
595
165
205
269
188

923
795
511
65
115
194
141

439
274
251
38
52
66
64

218
175
127
30
46
84
48

84
46
33
1
6
15
5

999
751
566
70
128
215
223

1 079
767
520
94
146
236
199

599
436
263
34
100
141
98

275
286
205
18
41
70
71

202
121
122
15
30
33
40

204
187
132
19
29
98
42

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

0
0

0
0

0
0
0

24
5

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0
0

9
2

0
0

0
0

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO
1.8
2.1
3.4
2.7

0.7

5.0
5.5
6.0
3.9
2.1
2.5
3.5
2.0
2.9
9.2
3.1
3.2

4.1
3.3
2.6
2.6
1.7

1.7
1.4
1.2
1.4

1.6
2.3
2.7
2.0

2.1
2.7
1.0

7.0

2.2
2.7
3.2

2.3
1.4
1.7

3.3
2.2
3.3
1.6
2.0
1.9
2.6
2.1
2.1
1.8

2.0
2.9
2.9
3.9
2.4

1.9
2.0

2.7
1.8

2.9
3.2

1.0
0.0

2.0

0.7
1.8
2.2

2.0
1.4
2.3
2.0
2.3
1.8
1.4

1.6
1.7
1.6
2.3
1.6
1.4
1.4

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

European Region

MALE
YEAR

209

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[
MALE

Latvia

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Malta

Monaco

Montenegro
Netherlands

Norway

Poland

Portugal

Republic of
Moldova

Romania

Russian
Federation

San Marino

Serbia
Serbia &
Montenegro
Slovakia

Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Tajikistan

The Former
Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia
Turkey

Turkmenistan

Ukraine

United Kingdom of
Great Britain and
Northern Ireland
Uzbekistan

210

FEMALE

YEAR

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
2005
2010
1995
2000
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

0
0
1
0
4
1
0
1

20
53
22
20
46
38
42
34

44
106
71
44
132
97
118
75

71
124
104
65
225
145
186
128

70
111
117
71
176
155
187
157

40
64
55
39
90
74
108
89

30
34
34
15
77
68
67
54

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
1
1
0

2
0
0
0
1
3

2
0
1
1
1
0

1
0
0
1
1
0

1
0
0
0
1
0

2
0
0
1
0
0

0
0
22
0
0
0
0
0
0

3
1
79
34
23
22
4
1
9

5
1
119
63
42
29
8
9
4

7
4
75
41
23
22
6
3
6

15
4
28
25
26
20
3
6
4

4
7
9
10
14
9
5
2
4

8
1
10
21
19
17
12
4
3

3
1
3
3
11
8
5

122
99
109
70
215
147
85

295
303
199
205
363
375
227

795
812
389
310
328
349
284

565
782
639
574
200
208
181

369
361
292
393
173
140
90

377
434
310
237
164
140
93

0
2
2
0
387
46
36
21

55
52
211
119
1 662
832
752
669

115
31
337
243
2 322
1 508
1 511
865

166
36
345
244
3 608
1 799
1 786
1 336

95
13
313
248
2 587
1 684
1 999
1 293

65
13
106
113
1 751
916
952
895

15
6
31
21
784
533
638
567

295

526

596

402

151

54

2 228

6 276

5 571

5 361

2 787

920

UNKNOWN

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

0
2
0
0
5
0
1
1

22
25
17
6
6
20
25
20

49
41
31
19
53
37
41
36

55
27
31
25
45
39
57
31

47
28
23
12
32
32
49
43

27
7
18
10
16
22
23
18

29
15
12
13
42
48
54
32

0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

2
0
1

1
0
0

1
0
0

1
0
1

0
0
2

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
1

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
1
24
4
3
1
0
1
0

0
3
56
29
14
9
4
3
4

7
3
50
22
19
14
7
1
7

3
2
13
16
11
13
2

4
3
10
9
9
5
0
1

8
8
7
10
4
11
8
5
3

0
0

0
1
8
5
1
4
3
2
0

4
1
3
2
7
5
7

129
99
95
59
139
114
67

163
158
142
118
172
154
109

225
211
112
82
87
87
66

111
170
151
104
33
41
29

107
82
63
82
42
25
11

414
421
316
245
85
64
42

4
0

2
1
3
6
355
53
55
40

42
16
97
47
1 352
701
758
503

38
32
92
90
1 240
766
780
477

31
45
57
46
871
484
493
400

19
23
61
47
479
341
374
275

10
14
23
23
396
207
219
172

12
6
18
20
417
321
442
438

43

73

74

38

31

44

28

1 247

2 554

1 719

1 182

745

790

0
0

6
5
11

69
66
127

76
74
167

55
46
133

49
39
83

22
34
158

149
164
275

0
0

5
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
23

16
5
1
1
7
3
4
1
90

17
9
8
6
24
9
4
5
129

22
7
9
7
11
3
6
2
64

24
5
5
2
9
4
5
4
39

33
4
6
3
5
3
4
1
34

159
54
27
11
42
20
16
3
98

10
14
0
1
1
2
1
1
0
0

142
130
10
9
10
9
13
9
6
7

252
251
13
8
15
16
20
12
11
15

151
151
5
10
12
11
9
8
8
6

63
54
5
2
5
4
1
2
3
4

24
23
4
2
3
2
2
1
2
1

108
76
14
15
13
3
15
6
4
3

2
0

26
23
2
1
2
0

225
320
32
15
17
9

185
272
30
14
13
12

151
111
20
17
10
7

89
109
11
5
7
7

43
87
17
5
5
4

53
82
17
10
13
6

0
0

50
33
2
19
3
2
21
41

699
485
15
73
100
112
314
487

474
384
146
140
101
112
380
590

243
193
0
76
72
74
327
447

175
141
47
31
46
46
182
298

166
101
25
34
27
38
185
218

213
203
0
17
8
25
280
405

95
115
110

114
163
131

60
80
81

31
39
42

31
28
40

67
83
58

1
0

261
538
365

547
597
512

288
375
308

213
288
248

112
217
239

111
367
350

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

2
0

3
2
10

62
76
108

96
70
204

118
93
317

156
116
296

112
83
350

132
109
386

4
2
0
1
1
0
0
0
22

18
6
3
7
13
3
4
4
132

44
15
13
7
39
11
10
7
337

123
31
16
18
63
36
16
10
242

108
50
25
17
36
22
15
9
150

63
16
25
17
26
14
11
6
112

152
32
20
15
27
17
14
12
228

13
6
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0

166
139
5
9
7
10
12
5
10
6

394
306
12
10
21
28
23
18
9
12

367
291
8
12
16
8
26
10
13
9

230
286
5
11
10
5
23
7
12
6

140
146
4
4
5
5
13
5
2
5

230
184
27
25
16
13
27
8
7
8

8
12
2
5
2
0

308
398
15
8
14
6

279
366
42
14
20
19

164
214
45
20
23
24

104
129
33
19
20
24

54
93
29
20
18
12

48
74
24
14
13
11

33
23
1
16
2
1
10
21

1 148
631
11
103
148
130
385
693

1 295
779
188
185
181
212
1 076
1 552

1 028
703
0
144
146
183
2 064
2 385

963
778
79
127
97
141
1 515
2 007

534
514
30
31
51
51
1 087
1 062

429
407
0
21
13
26
437
532

8
9
7

86
135
132

130
200
169

96
166
135

87
95
108

75
95
60

138
124
108

0
0

9
14
15

6
25
8

351
596
487

749
831
574

510
723
529

346
522
479

213
263
293

107
313
297

11
40
22

0
0

0
0

2
1

0
0

0
0

0
0

1
0

0
0

7 417

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

2 559

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO
1.2
3.4
3.1
3.0
3.8
2.9
2.8
3.0

1.6

0.3

3.0

1.9
0.9
2.0
2.0
2.4
2.1
1.6
2.1
1.8

2.2
2.4
2.2
2.6
2.6
2.8
2.9

3.3
1.1
3.8
3.5
2.6
2.5
2.5
2.4

6.7

2.8

1.6
1.3
1.8

1.9
1.8
1.8
2.7
2.1
2.5
1.8
3.0
2.6

2.1
1.9
1.2
1.5
1.3
1.5
2.0
1.4
1.6
1.3

1.3
1.3
1.5
1.5
1.7
2.1

2.7
2.5
1.3
1.6
1.8
1.8
3.9
3.3

2.9

1.5
1.6
1.5

1.5
1.4
1.3

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

211

2.7
16
2.2

7.3

12
2.0
11

0.7

0.5

0.6
1.2
2.2

1.1

31
7.5
8.9
9.0
10
12
424
7.9
11
10
11

2.9
2.3
0.7
0.4
0.2
0.2
8.5
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.2

<0.1
0.5
1.4

6.0
16
15
13

0.1
0.3
0.3
0.3

6.4
7.4

2.3
12

0.7
0.3

0.1
0.1

0.9
7.5
10

0.2
0.4
0.2

5.6
23

53
15
20

1.1
0.1
0.5

1.7
0.6

1.6
471
1.6

0.5
9.4
1.4

In country

In country

0.6
0.4

In country
No
In country

Out of country

In and out of cty


In and out of cty
In country
In country
In country
Out of country

In and out of cty


In country
In country

No
In and out of cty
In country
In and out of cty
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
In country
In and out of cty
In country

In country
In country
In country
In country
Out of country
Out of country
In country

In and out of cty


In country
In country

In country
Out of country
Out of country

No
In country
In country

SECOND-LINE
DST
AVAILABLE

4.7
1.0
5.1

2.4

2.7
6.5
0.7

1.8
2.5

5.6
10

7.9
0.3
3.1
6.1

6.9
2.8
2.2
9.0
10
0

3.5
0
3.4
1.3

1.1
4.4

0.9
7.5
1.9

6.5
5.3
14

1.6
471
1.6

DST LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

LABORATORIES

CULTURE LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
No

No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

NRL

Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects

If TB is confirmed

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
No
If TB is confirmed

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
No
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes
Yes
Yes

FIRST-LINE DRUGS

If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

TB DIAGNOSIS

FREE THROUGH NTP

Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

RIFAMPICIN USED
THROUGHOUT
TREATMENT

European Region

100

0
100
70

96

10
100
100

0
95

80

0
0
90

50
98
0
99

0
95
90

100

60

80
60
0
92
0

100
100
85

% OF PATIENTS
TREATED WITH FDCb

DRUG MANAGEMENT

a NRL = national reference laboratory


b FDC = fixed-dose combination
c NURSES (Registered Nurses, Registered Midwives, Enrolled Nurses, Enrolled Midwives); HEALTH ASSISTANTS (Medical Assistants, Clinical Officers); LABORATORY TECHNICIANS (Microscopists)

Albania
Andorra
Armenia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Monaco
Montenegro
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Republic of Moldova
Romania
Russian Federation
San Marino
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Tajikistan
The Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Ukraine
United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern
Ireland
Uzbekistan

SMEAR LABS
PER 100K
POPULATION

7$%/($/DERUDWRULHV173VHUYLFHVGUXJPDQDJHPHQWKXPDQUHVRXUFHVDQGLQIHFWLRQFRQWURO

No

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
No

No
No
No

Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes

No
No
Yes
Yes

Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
No

No
No
No
No
No

No
Yes
No

PAEDIATRIC
FORMULATIONS
PROCURED

22

62

14

95

65

70

95

100

30

80

NURSES

100

100

70

18

MEDICAL
OFFICERS

100

70

HEALTH
ASSISTANTS

18

15

51

100

100

70

12

LABORATORY
TECHNICIANS

% OF STAFF TRAINED BY THE NTP (IN 2010)c

37

64

125
53
497

2038

15

TB NOTIFICATION
RATE PER 100 000
HEALTH-CARE
WORKERS

South-East Asia Region


Table A3.1 Estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB, 19902010

215

Table A3.2 Incidence, notication and case detection rates, all forms, 19902010

216

Table A3.3 Case notications, 19902010

217

Table A3.4 Treatment outcomes, new smear-positive cases, 19952009

218

Table A3.5 Treatment outcomes, retreatment cases, 19952009

219

Table A3.6 HIV testing and provision of CPT, ART and IPT, 20052010

220

Table A3.7 Testing for MDR-TB and number of conrmed cases of MDR-TB, 20052010

221

Table A3.8 New smear-positive case notication by age and sex, 19952010

222

Table A3.9 Laboratories, NTP services, drug management, human resources and
infection control, 2010

223

Estimates of mortality, prevalence and incidence


Estimated values are shown as best estimates followed by lower and upper bounds. The lower and upper bounds are
de ned as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of outcome distributions produced in simulations. See ANNEX 1 for further
details.
Estimated numbers are shown rounded to two signicant gures. Estimated rates are shown rounded to three
signicant gures unless the value is under 100, in which case rates are shown rounded to two signicant gures.
Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are re ned, so they
may differ from those published in previous reports in this series. Estimates published in previous global TB control
reports should no longer be used.

Data source
Data shown in this annex are taken from the WHO global TB database on 2 September 2011. Data shown in the main
part of the report were taken from the database on 21 June 2011. As a result, data in this annex may differ slightly from
those in the main part of the report.
Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data.

South-East Asia
India
Estimates for India have not yet been ofcially approved by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of
India and should therefore be considered provisional.

214

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

Bangladesh

Bhutan

Democratic
People's Republic
of Korea

India

Indonesia

Maldives

Myanmar

Nepal

Sri Lanka

Thailand

Timor-Leste

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

105
117
130
141
145
147
149
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
20
22
23
24
24
24
24
874
964
1 054
1 140
1 191
1 208
1 225
184
199
213
227
235
237
240
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
39
42
45
46
47
48
48
19
22
24
27
29
29
30
17
18
19
20
20
21
21
57
60
63
67
68
69
69
1
1
1
1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

62
69
72
69
64
64
64
0.26
0.18
0.17
0.14
0.096
0.063
0.067
19
21
19
15
8.4
6.3
5.7
340
370
410
410
360
340
320
93
110
110
71
64
63
64
0.069
0.023
0.027
0.019
0.011
0.011
0.011
43
44
43
27
23
22
20
7.3
6
5.1
5.5
6.1
6.2
6.2
2
2.3
1.9
1.9
1.9
1.9
1.9
11
11
14
12
12
11
11
0.64
0.74
0.63
0.52

(3596)
(5486)
(5691)
(5189)
(4685)
(4785)
(4785)
(0.120.5)
(0.110.29)
(0.10.27)
(0.0840.22)
(0.0610.16)
(0.050.076)
(0.0540.081)
(1130)
(1726)
(1424)
(1020)
(5.213)
(4.310)
(4.19.4)
(210480)
(230540)
(250580)
(290550)
(230530)
(220500)
(210470)
(54140)
(88130)
(84130)
(4999)
(4293)
(4192)
(4291)
(0.0330.12)
(0.0150.037)
(0.0170.041)
(0.0110.03)
(<0.010.017)
(<0.010.018)
(<0.010.017)
(3157)
(3356)
(3454)
(1936)
(1632)
(1530)
(1231)
(3.912)
(4.28.3)
(3.17.7)
(3.48.5)
(3.89.3)
(3.99.3)
(3.99.3)
(0.873.7)
(1.73.1)
(1.32.8)
(1.22.8)
(1.22.8)
(1.22.8)
(1.22.8)
(4.922)
(7.416)
(1019)
(7.717)
(8.518)
(7.517)
(716)
(0.381)
(0.451.1)
(0.361)
(0.310.89)

RATEa

58
59
56
49
44
44
43
47
35
29
21
14
8.8
9.2
96
97
81
61
35
26
23
38
38
38
36
31
29
26
51
55
50
31
27
27
27
31
9.2
9.9
6.5
3.5
3.6
3.4
110
104
96
57
49
46
41
38
28
21
20
21
21
21
11
13
10
9.5
9.4
9.1
9.1
20
19
22
18
18
17
16
63
68
57
46

(3391)
(4673)
(4370)
(3763)
(3258)
(3258)
(3257)
(2289)
(2255)
(1847)
(1333)
(8.723)
(7.111)
(7.411)
(55150)
(76120)
(61104)
(4285)
(2255)
(1842)
(1739)
(2455)
(2455)
(2455)
(2548)
(1944)
(1842)
(1739)
(2978)
(4468)
(3962)
(2143)
(1840)
(1739)
(1838)
(1555)
(5.915)
(6.115)
(3.910)
(2.35.4)
(2.35.7)
(2.15.4)
(80145)
(79133)
(75121)
(4078)
(3369)
(3264)
(2465)
(2163)
(1938)
(1332)
(1231)
(1332)
(1332)
(1331)
(521)
(9.117)
(6.915)
(6.114)
(6.114)
(5.913)
(5.913)
(8.538)
(1227)
(1630)
(1226)
(1226)
(1124)
(1023)
(38100)
(42104)
(3394)
(2879)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

520
580
620
620
600
610
610
2.8
2.2
2
1.7
1.4
1.2
1.3
160
170
160
140
110
100
97
4000
4500
4900
4100
3500
3300
3100
780
890
890
720
690
690
690
0.48
0.077
0.15
0.098
0.033
0.04
0.04
350
370
370
300
270
260
250
64
60
58
64
70
71
71
20
22
20
20
21
21
21
120
110
130
130
130
130
130
7.4
8.2
7.7
7.2

(210990)
(260950)
(2901000)
(2901000)
(270990)
(2801000)
(2801000)
(15.4)
(0.843.8)
(0.773.5)
(0.643)
(0.442.5)
(0.292.1)
(0.322.3)
(62310)
(77290)
(74260)
(64240)
(38190)
(28170)
(24170)
(36004500)
(39005000)
(43005500)
(33005000)
(25004700)
(22004600)
(20004600)
(3101500)
(3901500)
(4101500)
(3201200)
(3001200)
(2901100)
(3001200)
(0.141.1)
(0.0120.22)
(0.0460.32)
(0.0280.22)
(<0.010.091)
(<0.010.11)
(<0.010.11)
(150610)
(160630)
(170620)
(140490)
(120430)
(190320)
(180310)
(26120)
(2799)
(2399)
(25110)
(29120)
(29120)
(29120)
(7.339)
(1036)
(8.734)
(8.634)
(8.835)
(8.735)
(8.835)
(44230)
(54190)
(63220)
(58210)
(61220)
(57210)
(55210)
(2.813)
(3.314)
(2.814)
(2.313)

RATE

493
494
479
440
414
412
411
500
432
357
260
202
171
181
792
793
706
603
459
412
399
459
462
466
358
294
275
256
423
445
418
315
294
289
289
220
31
55
33
11
13
13
894
881
831
647
564
544
525
335
278
238
235
242
241
238
114
121
108
103
103
101
101
204
193
212
193
196
188
182
733
760
703
643

(199937)
(225810)
(221783)
(206718)
(189681)
(188677)
(188671)
(180972)
(161740)
(135616)
(97449)
(63351)
(41301)
(44318)
(3071519)
(3541313)
(3251157)
(271999)
(158790)
(115718)
(100698)
(407515)
(409519)
(412522)
(288436)
(209393)
(185382)
(161373)
(168804)
(196738)
(190687)
(141523)
(127493)
(123484)
(123484)
(62500)
(4.688)
(17118)
(9.575)
(1.730)
(2.534)
(2.434)
(3811555)
(3801496)
(3761377)
(3011052)
(253913)
(396667)
(381643)
(136644)
(126458)
(96405)
(93403)
(99409)
(98409)
(96405)
(42227)
(56198)
(47180)
(43173)
(43172)
(42171)
(42170)
(77404)
(90317)
(100349)
(87321)
(89320)
(83310)
(80300)
(2811266)
(3051302)
(2511233)
(2021138)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

240
260
290
320
330
330
330
1.7
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.2
1.1
1.1
69
75
79
82
83
84
84
1900
2100
2300
2400
2300
2300
2300
350
380
400
430
440
450
450
0.33
0.26
0.2
0.15
0.13
0.12
0.11
150
170
190
190
190
180
180
31
35
40
45
47
48
49
11
12
12
13
14
14
14
78
82
86
91
93
94
94
5
5.4
5.5
5.6

(140350)
(210320)
(240350)
(260380)
(270390)
(270400)
(270400)
(1.12.4)
(1.31.9)
(1.21.7)
(11.5)
(0.971.4)
(0.941.3)
(0.921.3)
(42100)
(6190)
(6495)
(6799)
(7196)
(7197)
(7297)
(16002200)
(18002400)
(20002500)
(21002600)
(21002600)
(21002500)
(20002500)
(210520)
(310450)
(330490)
(350520)
(360540)
(370540)
(370540)
(0.20.49)
(0.220.3)
(0.160.24)
(0.120.18)
(0.110.15)
(0.10.14)
(0.0980.13)
(110200)
(130210)
(150220)
(160220)
(160210)
(160210)
(160210)
(1946)
(2942)
(3248)
(3654)
(3857)
(3958)
(4058)
(7.117)
(9.815)
(1015)
(1116)
(1116)
(1116)
(1117)
(49110)
(6698)
(70100)
(74110)
(76110)
(77110)
(78110)
(46)
(4.36.5)
(4.56.6)
(4.66.7)

RATE

225
225
225
225
225
225
225
308
308
253
187
165
158
151
344
344
344
344
344
345
345
216
216
216
209
196
190
185
189
189
189
189
189
189
189
150
105
74
52
42
39
36
393
404
412
403
393
388
384
163
163
163
163
163
163
163
66
66
66
66
66
66
66
137
137
137
137
137
137
137
498
498
498
498

(137334)
(183271)
(183271)
(183271)
(183271)
(184270)
(184269)
(203433)
(254366)
(206305)
(155223)
(138194)
(132185)
(127177)
(210512)
(280415)
(280415)
(280415)
(293400)
(295399)
(295398)
(181255)
(189246)
(194240)
(188231)
(176217)
(171211)
(167205)
(115281)
(154228)
(154228)
(154228)
(154228)
(154227)
(155226)
(91223)
(90122)
(6089)
(4262)
(3747)
(3445)
(3142)
(288515)
(312508)
(332500)
(338474)
(336453)
(334446)
(328445)
(99243)
(133197)
(133197)
(133197)
(133197)
(133196)
(134195)
(4197)
(5480)
(5480)
(5480)
(5480)
(5479)
(5479)
(86199)
(111165)
(111165)
(111165)
(111165)
(112164)
(112163)
(399598)
(399598)
(406601)
(407598)

South-East Asia Region

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

215

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Bangladesh

Bhutan

Democratic
People's Republic
of Korea

India

Indonesia

Maldives

Myanmar

Nepal

Sri Lanka

Thailand

Timor-Leste

216

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

105
117
130
141
145
147
149
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
20
22
23
24
24
24
24
874
964
1 054
1 140
1 191
1 208
1 225
184
199
213
227
235
237
240
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
39
42
45
46
47
48
48
19
22
24
27
29
29
30
17
18
19
20
20
21
21
57
60
63
67
68
69
69
1
1
1
1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

240
260
290
320
330
330
330
1.7
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.2
1.1
1.1
69
75
79
82
83
84
84
1900
2100
2300
2400
2300
2300
2300
350
380
400
430
440
450
450
0.33
0.26
0.2
0.15
0.13
0.12
0.11
150
170
190
190
190
180
180
31
35
40
45
47
48
49
11
12
12
13
14
14
14
78
82
86
91
93
94
94
5
5.4
5.5
5.6

(140350)
(210320)
(240350)
(260380)
(270390)
(270400)
(270400)
(1.12.4)
(1.31.9)
(1.21.7)
(11.5)
(0.971.4)
(0.941.3)
(0.921.3)
(42100)
(6190)
(6495)
(6799)
(7196)
(7197)
(7297)
(16002200)
(18002400)
(20002500)
(21002600)
(21002600)
(21002500)
(20002500)
(210520)
(310450)
(330490)
(350520)
(360540)
(370540)
(370540)
(0.20.49)
(0.220.3)
(0.160.24)
(0.120.18)
(0.110.15)
(0.10.14)
(0.0980.13)
(110200)
(130210)
(150220)
(160220)
(160210)
(160210)
(160210)
(1946)
(2942)
(3248)
(3654)
(3857)
(3958)
(4058)
(7.117)
(9.815)
(1015)
(1116)
(1116)
(1116)
(1117)
(49110)
(6698)
(70100)
(74110)
(76110)
(77110)
(78110)
(46)
(4.36.5)
(4.56.6)
(4.66.7)

RATEb

225
225
225
225
225
225
225
308
308
253
187
165
158
151
344
344
344
344
344
345
345
216
216
216
209
196
190
185
189
189
189
189
189
189
189
150
105
74
52
42
39
36
393
404
412
403
393
388
384
163
163
163
163
163
163
163
66
66
66
66
66
66
66
137
137
137
137
137
137
137
498
498
498
498

(137334)
(183271)
(183271)
(183271)
(183271)
(184270)
(184269)
(203433)
(254366)
(206305)
(155223)
(138194)
(132185)
(127177)
(210512)
(280415)
(280415)
(280415)
(293400)
(295399)
(295398)
(181255)
(189246)
(194240)
(188231)
(176217)
(171211)
(167205)
(115281)
(154228)
(154228)
(154228)
(154228)
(154227)
(155226)
(91223)
(90122)
(6089)
(4262)
(3747)
(3445)
(3142)
(288515)
(312508)
(332500)
(338474)
(336453)
(334446)
(328445)
(99243)
(133197)
(133197)
(133197)
(133197)
(133196)
(134195)
(4197)
(5480)
(5480)
(5480)
(5480)
(5479)
(5479)
(86199)
(111165)
(111165)
(111165)
(111165)
(112164)
(112163)
(399598)
(399598)
(406601)
(407598)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
0.03
0.055
0.26
0.46
0.56
0.66
<0.01
<0.01
0.014
0.015
0.034
0.043
0.053

(<0.010.017)
(0.0130.053)
(<0.010.18)
(0.110.47)
(0.230.76)
(0.280.92)
(0.331.1)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.010.025)
(<0.010.03)
(0.0180.055)
(0.0220.071)
(0.0260.09)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.3
2.5
2.3
4.9
6.1
7.3

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<12.2)
(<12.5)
(1.14.4)
(<14.6)
(2.67.9)
(3.19.9)
(3.612)

17
76
130
140
120
120
110
<0.01
0.019
0.4
7.9
14
16
18

(927)
(48110)
(89180)
(91190)
(81170)
(78170)
(75160)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.042)
(0.190.69)
(413)
(7.622)
(8.825)
(9.929)

1.9
7.9
13
12
10
9.8
9.2
<1
<1
<1
3.5
6
6.8
7.6

(13.1)
(511)
(8.417)
(817)
(6.814)
(6.514)
(6.113)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(1.85.8)
(3.29.5)
(3.711)
(4.112)

7.7
19
27
28
20
26
37
0.34
0.62
0.87
0.98
1
0.94
0.87
<0.01
<0.01
0.034
0.057
0.066
0.092
0.13
10
18
17
16
15
15
15

(4.412)
(1228)
(1839)
(1839)
(1132)
(1736)
(2157)
(0.160.58)
(0.380.92)
(0.541.3)
(0.621.4)
(0.631.5)
(0.571.4)
(0.491.3)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(0.0150.061)
(0.0280.098)
(0.0310.11)
(0.0520.14)
(0.0670.21)
(616)
(1225)
(1224)
(1022)
(1219)
(1318)
(1318)

20
45
60
60
43
54
77
1.8
2.9
3.6
3.6
3.5
3.2
2.9
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
18
31
28
23
22
22
22

(1130)
(2766)
(3986)
(4083)
(2467)
(3775)
(43120)
(<13)
(1.84.3)
(2.25.2)
(2.35.2)
(2.25)
(1.94.8)
(1.64.5)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11)
(1028)
(2142)
(1938)
(1633)
(1827)
(1827)
(1827)

NUMBER

48 673
56 437
75 557
123 118
151 062
160 875
153 892
1 154
1 299
1 140
1 007
961
1 125
1 311

46
48
58
88
104
109
103
207
250
200
153
137
158
181

34 131
42 722
72 541
76 336
84 648
1 519 182
1 218 183
1 115 718
1 156 248
1 332 267
1 351 913
1 339 866
74 470
35 529
84 591
254 601
296 514
292 754
300 659
152
231
132
122
120
100
95
12 416
18 229
30 840
107 009
124 037
128 343
131 590
10 142
19 804
29 519
33 448
32 909
34 888
35 114
6 666
5 956
8 413
9 249
9 290
9 314
9 547
46 510
45 428
34 187
57 895
55 252
63 975
66 397
3 767
3 285
4 748
4 854

149
180
301
315
348
174
126
106
101
112
112
109
40
18
40
112
126
123
125
69
93
48
41
39
32
30
32
43
69
231
263
270
274
53
92
121
123
114
119
117
38
33
45
47
45
45
46
81
76
54
87
81
93
96
373
304
432
432

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

RATEb

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

21
21
26
39
46
49
46
67
81
79
81
83
100
120

43
52
87
91
101
80
58
49
49
57
59
59
21
9
21
59
67
65
66
46
88
65
80
93
82
83
8
11
17
57
67
69
71
33
56
74
75
70
73
72
58
49
68
70
69
68
69
60
56
40
64
59
68
70
75
61
87
87

(1434)
(1826)
(2232)
(3248)
(3857)
(4160)
(3856)
(48102)
(6998)
(6597)
(6899)
(71100)
(85119)
(102142)

(3653)
(4364)
(75103)
(79107)
(87118)
(6896)
(5167)
(4454)
(4454)
(5264)
(5365)
(5365)
(1435)
(812)
(1726)
(4973)
(5582)
(5480)
(5581)
(3176)
(76104)
(5480)
(6698)
(82106)
(7295)
(7297)
(611)
(914)
(1421)
(4968)
(5878)
(6081)
(6284)
(2254)
(4769)
(6291)
(6292)
(5886)
(6189)
(6087)
(4094)
(4161)
(5683)
(5887)
(5784)
(5783)
(5884)
(4195)
(4668)
(3349)
(5378)
(4973)
(5783)
(5985)
(6293)
(5176)
(72106)
(72106)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

Bangladesh

46

103

Bhutan

207

181

Democratic
People's Republic
of Korea

348

India

174

109

Indonesia

40

125

Maldives

69

30

Myanmar

32

274

Nepal

53

117

Sri Lanka

38

46

Thailand

81

96

Timor-Leste

311

432

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
48 673
56 437
75 557
123 118
151 062
160 875
153 892
1 154
1 299
1 140
1 007
961
1 125
1 311

34 131
42 722
72 541
76 336
84 648
1 519 182
1 218 183
1 115 718
1 156 248
1 332 267
1 351 913
1 339 866
74 470
35 529
84 591
254 601
296 514
292 754
300 659
152
231
132
122
120
100
95
12 416
18 229
30 840
107 009
124 037
128 343
131 590
10 142
19 804
29 519
33 448
32 909
34 888
35 114
6 666
5 956
8 413
9 249
9 290
9 314
9 547
46 510
45 428
34 187
57 895
55 252
63 975
66 397
3 767
3 285
4 748
4 854

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

20 524
38 484
84 848
106 373
109 402
105 772

19 297
29 396
23 076
22 192
25 375
21 625

2 060
5 914
11 318
18 359
21 999
23 506

367
347
308
351
434
457

657
430
272
146
285
275

265
363
387
418
355
518

16 440
17 796
28 026
29 366
31 240

13 801
18 123
31 444
32 491
36 285

3 787
5 381
10 914
12 232
13 715

264 515
349 374
508 890
615 977
624 617
630 165

880 589
650 345
399 066
390 356
384 113
366 381

68 979
98 006
171 838
219 946
233 026
231 121

31 768
52 338
158 640
166 376
169 213
183 366

34
15 035
85 373
116 850
108 616
101 247

0
833
6 142
9 673
11 215
11 659

114
65
66
53
45
41

89
31
23
32
13
20

18
32
29
35
41
33

8 681
17 254
36 541
41 248
41 357
42 318

7 058
8 659
35 601
44 034
50 919
56 840

653
2 304
30 252
34 447
31 509
27 976

8 591
13 683
14 617
14 640
15 442
15 569
2 769
3 049
4 314
4 868
4 683
4 764
4 635

7 938
9 074
9 474
9 298
9 794
9 718
3 241
1 677
2 261
2 198
2 146
1 996
2 145

2 489
4 955
7 013
6 527
7 054
7 210
656
982
1 561
1 917
2 167
2 358
2 548

20 273
17 754
29 762
28 788
32 810
33 450
1 035
867
1 206

22 606
12 439
18 837
16 933
20 058
20 927
2 142
1 996
3 095

1 419
2 953
7 501
7 815
9 143
10 135
554
399
406

OTHER RELAPSE

729
1 763
3 876
4 138
4 099
2 989

0
0
0

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

4 806

729
1 763
3 876
6 991
4 099
7 795

10
36
40
46
51
61

11
24
25
21

10
36
51
70
76
82

0
0
0

103
1 364
2 157
2 247
3 408

7 752
12 013
12 329
11 650

103
9 116
14 170
14 576
15 058

1 381
1 774
1 796
1 508

690
17 993
75 073
104 214
108 361
110 691

80 072
148 580
185 071
181 395
182 281

690
98 065
223 653
289 285
289 756
292 972

0
0

106
1 448
4 446
3 615
3 710
4 387

1 815
1 978
2 202

106
1 448
4 446
5 430
5 688
6 589

0
0
0
0

10
4
4
0
1
1

0
1
2
4
2

10
4
5
2
5
3

0
0
0
0

1 837
2 623
4 615
4 308
4 558
4 456

982
4 701
5 159
5 813

1 837
2 623
5 597
9 009
9 717
10 269

786
1 807
2 344
2 444
2 598
2 617

629
510
519
495

786
1 807
2 973
2 954
3 117
3 112

372
244
192
213
161

248
649
510
394
409
380

202
132
261
387

2 240
1 965
1 111
16
12
11

1 130
1 041
1 795
3 956
3 929
2 996
52
35
52

58
0
0

0
92
0

0
0
0

248
277
266
202
196
219
1 130
1 041
1 795
1 716
1 964
1 885
36
23
41

2 853

731
0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

52
57
79
83
81
83

36
45
53
71
60
62

54
50
47
47
46

23
35
56
61
62
63

100
78
65
59
61
64

56
68
74
62
78
67

55
67
51
48
45
43

52
60
61
61
61
62
46
65
66
69
69
70
68

47
59
61
63
62
62
33
30
28

South-East Asia Region

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

217

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

Bangladesh

71

92

97

92

Bhutan

Democratic
People's Republic
of Korea

89

25

88

91

91

97

47

67

85

73

90

79

86

64

86

81

India

Indonesia

Maldives

Myanmar

Nepal

Sri Lanka

Thailand

Timor-Leste

218

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

20 524
38 484
84 848
104 296
106 373
109 402
367
347
308
328
351
434

10 867
38 484
84 848
104 296
106 089
109 075
433
347
340
331
354
434

16 440
17 796
23 575
28 026
29 366
264 515
349 374
508 890
592 587
615 977
624 617
31 768
52 338
158 640
160 617
166 376
169 213
114
65
66
59
53
45
8 681
17 254
36 541
42 588
41 248
41 357
8 591
13 683
14 617
14 355
14 640
15 442
3 049
4 314
4 868
4 528
4 683
4 764
20 273
17 754
29 762
28 487
28 788
32 810
1 035
1 021
867
1 206

14 571
17 796
23 575
28 026
29 366
264 722
349 328
507 204
592 414
615 977
624 617
3 018
52 338
158 640
160 617
166 376
169 213
114
59
70
60
53
45
7 872
16 792
36 652
42 773
41 247
41 811
8 053
12 992
14 617
14 355
14 640
15 468
3 058
4 314
4 841
4 477
4 646
4 754
20 273
23 061
29 919
29 588
33 078
27 597
1 035
1 021
867

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

53
100
100
100
100
100
118
100
110
101
101
100

89
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
10
100
100
100
100
100
100
91
106
102
100
100
91
97
100
100
100
101
94
95
100
100
100
100
100
100
99
99
99
100
100
130
101
104
115
84
100
100
100

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

66
77
91
91
90
91
78
75
84
91
89
86

5
4
1
1
2
1
20
15
7
2
2
6

5
4
4
3
4
4
0
4
5
3
3
3

2
1
1
1
1
1
0
3
3
3
3
3

10
9
2
2
2
2
1
3
1
0
0
2

12
5
2
3
2
2
1
0
0
1
3
0

73
84
82
83
85
1
31
83
84
85
85
73
70
83
82
83
84
96
97
86
68
45
47
53
73
77
77
78
77
56
79
87
86
86
87
75
75
83
84
81
83
36
65
70
77
76
81
61
69
73

9
5
5
6
5
25
4
2
2
2
2
18
17
8
9
8
7
2
0
0
0

3
2
3
2
2
0
1
5
5
4
4
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
6
3
4
2
4
5
6
5
6
6
3
5
5
5
4
4
3
4
5
5
6
6
2
8
8
9
7
7
5
4
5

7
4
4
4
4
0
1
2
2
2
2
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0

5
2
3
2
2
0
7
7
6
6
6
6
4
4
4
4
4
0
0
3
10
11
4
18
9
5
5
5
5
18
7
3
3
3
3
13
15
6
7
7
4
9
7
7
5
4
3
11
8
7

3
2
3
2
2
75
57
1
1
1
1
1
5
2
2
2
2
0
2
6
18
40
44
7
2
2
2
2
2
6
2
2
3
3
2
4
2
1
1
1
3
24
15
9
2
4
2
2
4
3

0
14
9
7
8
8
8
17
5
1
2
3
3
4
4
3
3
4
3
28
3
5
6
7
5
21
15
12

2
4
2
3
3
3
3
2
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
2
0
2
2
2
2
1
1
0
0

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Bangladesh

75

81

Bhutan

59

82

Democratic
People's Republic
of Korea

83

70

75

32

72

India

Indonesia

Maldives

Myanmar

64

73

Nepal

85

Sri Lanka

73

Thailand

68

Timor-Leste

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

729
1 763
3 876
3 788
6 991
4 099
10
36
51
54
70
76

1 179
1 815
3 876
3 788

103
9 116
11 234
14 170
14 576
690
98 065
223 653
276 542
289 285
289 756
106
1 448
4 446
4 382
5 430
5 688
10
4
5
3
2
5
1 837
2 623
5 597
9 131
9 009
9 717
786
1 807
2 973
2 748
2 954
3 117
248
649
510
438
394
409
1 130
1 041
1 795
1 665
3 956
3 929
52
44
35
52

1 285
9 116
11 234
14 170
14 576
551
48 133
224 143
193 364
289 285
289 756
76
2 530
4 812
4 382
5 430
5 687

6 637
22
52
46
70
76

5
5
0
0
1
1 443
3 001
6 556
9 167
8 631
9 540
2 047
2 973
2 748
1 954
3 063
521
504
432
393
408

2 285
2 562
3 468
2 542
56
44
35

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

162
103
100
100

162
220

102
85
100
100

1 248
100
100
100
100
80
49
100
70
100
100
72
175
108
100
100
100

125
100
0
0
20
79
114
117
100
96
98

113
100
100
66
98

80
99
99
100
100

127
154
88
65
108
100
100

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

71
70
73
74

3
2
6
5

5
4
4
4

8
2
2
2

11
7
5
5

2
14
9
10

66
50

16
9

6
0

2
23

5
14

6
5

65
80
76
70

10
11
3
12

6
4
3
8

8
2
16
7

2
0
1
3

10
2
1
1

75
70
69
75
74
64
55
47
63
45
45
22
50
63
60
50
53

11
6
8
8
9
6
15
24
2
29
29
9
22
15
17
21
20

2
3
4
3
2
4
7
7
8
7
7
0
3
3
4
4
4

4
12
13
10
11
3
5
4
5
4
4
0
3
4
3
3
3

2
5
3
3
2
13
16
16
15
13
13
1
7
8
11
14
12

5
4
3
2
2
9
2
1
7
2
1
67
15
7
5
7
8

100
80

0
55
65
58
44
46
44

20

0
8
9
14
9
27
28

0
4
7
10
8
12
11

0
4
4
6
4
5
5

0
19
12
7
5
7
7

0
0

100
9
3
5
30
3
4

73
81
80
71
82

3
2
2
4
3

4
4
5
10
6

8
6
3
5
3

7
4
3
5
4

4
3
7
5
3

44
67
68
64
66

20
5
5
7
7

6
5
7
8
8

1
2
2
2
1

26
18
16
15
13

3
3
2
5
5

52
61
54
58
96
59
57

6
9
12
10
0
16
14

12
11
9
11
2
2
11

5
6
4
5
0
7
6

7
9
7
7
2
9
11

18
3
14
9
0
7
0

South-East Asia Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

219

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

YEAR

Bangladesh

Bhutan

25

Democratic
People's Republic
of Korea
India

32

Indonesia

Maldives

Myanmar

Nepal

Sri Lanka

10

77

Thailand

Timor-Leste

220

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS
0
0
1
1
25
7
12

0
0

2
2
17
32

0
1

0
0
2
3
3
3

1
19
10

78
75
77
0
0
2

0
37
1 446
1 778
250
68
136

0
0
29 488
34 225
258 037
480 752
367
2 782

0
0
2 109
4 292
4 174
4 362

123
1 897
1 015
45 000
49 657
52 753
0
1
108

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)
123 118
153 915
160 875
158 698
1 018
985
1 150
1 332
50 474
84 554
88 665
96 298
1 304 828
1 517 338
1 533 308
1 522 147
254 601
298 329
294 732
302 861
123
122
104
97
107 991
128 738
133 502
137 403
34 077
33 419
35 407
35 609
9 695
9 614
9 788
10 095
57 895
57 492
65 940
68 239
3 783
3 297
4 759

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE

37
1
4
1
2
2

0
0
6 411
6 039
36 483
41 476
107
479

0
0
611
4 200
1 015
961

2
0

8 215
8 109
8 544
1
0

100
0
0
0
3
1

22
18
14
9

29
17

29
98
24
22

18
16
16

100
0

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

57
100
100
0
0
0

68
89
90

50
26
97
100

69
72
71

100

59
100
0
0
100
100

41
50
57

42

31
28
67
94

39
50
53

100

64
0

0
0

0
0
0
333
514

2
5
3
206
127

0
2

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

YEAR
Bangladesh

Bhutan

Democratic
People's Republic
of Korea
India

Indonesia

Maldives

Myanmar

Nepal

Sri Lanka

Thailand

339
2
7
8
17

34
308
1 660
2 967
446
182
3
0
508
815
192
76
69
229
32
8
4
11
358

3
4

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED
119 242
146 924
156 776
150 903
967
915
1 074
1 250
41 358
70 384
74 089
81 240
1 081 175
1 228 053
1 243 552
1 229 175
250 155
292 899
289 044
296 272
118
120
99
94
102 394
119 729
123 785
127 134
31 104
30 465
32 290
32 497
8 983
9 088
9 118
9 328
56 100
53 536
62 011
64 512
3 731
3 262
4 707

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

2
7
7
108

136
130
126
659
759
813
839

0
0

0
1
1
9

0
0
0
7
8
9
9

0
0

2
7
3
5

12
7
9
7
3
0
5

0
0

NOTIFIED
3 876
6 991
4 099
7 795
51
70
76
82
9 116
14 170
14 576
15 058
223 653
289 285
289 756
292 972
4 446
5 430
5 688
6 589
5
2
5
3
5 597
9 009
9 717
10 269
2 973
2 954
3 117
3 112
510
394
409
380
1 795
3 956
3 929
2 996
52
35
52

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

339
3
0
8
30

1 511
3 454

324

0
680
962

300
220
193
417
323
419
378

9
6

4
6
0
11
37

1
1

8
10

10
7
6
82
82
102
99

26
12

339
0
0
4
10

308
1 660

182

0
508
815

54
51
168
25
5
4
6

0
4

South-East Asia Region

Timor-Leste

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

221

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[
MALE

Bangladesh

Bhutan

Democratic
People's Republic
of Korea
India

Indonesia

Maldives

Myanmar

Nepal

Sri Lanka

Thailand

Timor-Leste

222

FEMALE

YEAR

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
2005
2010

29
256
524
365
2
6
1

505
3 640
8 170
10 460
42
65
47
108

983
5 643
10 443
12 535
65
41
58
50

1 001
5 750
11 423
11 409
36
30
26
25

748
4 718
11 038
12 758
35
24
23
12

648
3 667
8 476
11 176
24
12
14
26

424
2 837
7 453
11 536
11
2
12
13

293
167
447
16
1 588
3 185
4 871
6

928
1 409
2 524
334
20 963
62 620
78 278
203

1 508
2 422
4 046
391
31 090
74 678
82 757
297

2 927
2 688
4 849
287
30 829
76 870
90 440
306

2 519
2 040
4 061
216
24 230
64 843
81 210
302

1 167
1 185
2 629
123
15 308
43 038
60 766
228

651
485
1 153
68
8 534
24 726
38 442
109

846
714
1
0
0
0
42
88
132
106

15 215
16 501
28
9
9
8
713
1 459
3 401
3 043

20 906
24 645
11
10
8
6
1 423
2 636
5 877
6 578

18 401
21 090
10
2
5
0
1 401
2 781
5 888
6 688

17 847
20 977
8
5
6
4
977
2 161
4 585
5 607

13 509
17 329
10
5
6
5
677
1 235
2 557
3 632

6 390
7 910
6
3
5
6
298
836
1 764
2 308

170
148
165
10
25
9
14
59
27
44
55
8

1 904
1 946
2 110
163
266
341
268
1 191
859
1 344
1 506
136

1 763
1 685
1 832
361
459
520
539
2 936
2 570
3 814
3 695
149

1 713
1 722
1 724
519
695
724
602
2 948
2 380
4 393
5 253
116

1 491
1 806
1 856
521
793
918
884
2 434
2 117
4 003
5 042
119

1 294
1 759
1 857
365
484
657
683
2 607
1 908
2 831
3 625
52

772
820
1 126
261
360
424
448
2 346
2 213
3 407
4 189
47

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

64
495
751
653
12
7
9
17

309
3 029
6 776
9 221
43
57
45
104

546
3 238
6 785
8 279
44
34
38
45

360
2 247
5 538
6 185
25
31
13
18

236
1 315
3 960
5 458
12
23
11
18

132
778
2 281
3 484
9
3
9
10

38
370
1 230
2 250
8
2
2
9

167
166
407
32
2 250
6 292
8 544
16

683
1 127
1 493
179
14 495
45 136
53 415
160

1 121
1 756
2 461
169
17 287
45 629
49 425
244

2 004
1 890
2 910
80
11 768
28 577
34 035
282

1 524
1 381
2 276
49
7 516
17 042
22 719
192

591
764
1 347
30
4 594
10 513
15 527
90

357
336
637
11
2 697
5 408
9 735
33

946
816
1
0
1
1
58
72
147
196

13 916
14 800
13
11
10
2
535
1 040
2 376
2 452

16 393
17 838
8
4
7
3
729
1 592
3 047
3 454

13 022
14 629
4
5
1
4
729
1 397
2 563
2 752

10 927
13 142
6
4
2
1
450
987
2 101
2 525

7 539
9 524
6
5
2
0
343
592
1 218
1 838

2 783
3 451
2
2
4
1
154
378
885
1 139

176
195
192
15
23
19
15
52
32
57
82
8

1 267
1 208
1 177
207
312
295
255
741
624
907
1 087
127

1 078
1 111
1 036
206
264
261
233
888
1 035
1 662
1 930
90

833
797
819
142
176
189
171
782
780
1 334
1 749
76

575
658
681
122
202
200
183
936
873
1 367
1 467
60

419
532
642
81
144
154
186
1 175
1 016
1 259
1 494
18

228
230
352
56
113
130
154
1 178
1 321
1 938
2 276
29

UNKNOWN

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO
2.6
2.3
2.1
2.0
1.4
1.1
1.4
1.1

1.6
1.4
1.7
2.6
2.2
2.2
2.3
1.4

1.4
1.5
1.9
1.1
1.4
2.4
1.8
1.8
2.0
1.9

2.0
2.1
2.2
2.7
2.5
2.9
2.9
2.5
2.1
2.3
2.3
1.5

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

223

<0.1
0.1
0
0.2
0.3
0.2
1.1

In country
In country
Out of country
Out of country
In country
No
In country

<0.1
0.9
16
0.2
0.5
0.5
4.7

Out of country
Out of country

1.1
2.1
22
0.9
1.6
0.9
1.6

<0.1
6.9
No

0.1
6.9

SECOND-LINE
DST
AVAILABLE

1.2

0.7
4.4

DST LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

LABORATORIES

CULTURE LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

NRL

Yes, all suspects


Yes (other criteria)
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


If TB is confirmed

TB DIAGNOSIS

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

FIRST-LINE DRUGS

FREE THROUGH NTP

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

RIFAMPICIN USED
THROUGHOUT
TREATMENT

South-East Asia Region

0
100
95
100
100
90
25

100

100
100

% OF PATIENTS
TREATED WITH FDCb

DRUG MANAGEMENT

a NRL = national reference laboratory


b FDC = fixed-dose combination
c NURSES (Registered Nurses, Registered Midwives, Enrolled Nurses, Enrolled Midwives); HEALTH ASSISTANTS (Medical Assistants, Clinical Officers); LABORATORY TECHNICIANS (Microscopists)

Bangladesh
Bhutan
Democratic People's Republic
of Korea
India
Indonesia
Maldives
Myanmar
Nepal
Sri Lanka
Thailand
Timor-Leste

SMEAR LABS
PER 100K
POPULATION

7$%/($/DERUDWRULHV173VHUYLFHVGUXJPDQDJHPHQWKXPDQUHVRXUFHVDQGLQIHFWLRQFRQWURO

Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No

Yes

Yes
No

PAEDIATRIC
FORMULATIONS
PROCURED

85
0
70
20
97

100

29
25

MEDICAL
OFFICERS

71
0
88
6
85

100

25
0

NURSES

0
84
24

25
0

HEALTH
ASSISTANTS

85
0
72
26

100

62
100

LABORATORY
TECHNICIANS

% OF STAFF TRAINED BY THE NTP (IN 2010)c

TB NOTIFICATION
RATE PER 100 000
HEALTH-CARE
WORKERS

Western Pacic
Pacic Region
Table A3.1 Estimates of the burden of disease caused by TB, 19902010

227

Table A3.2 Incidence, notication and case detection rates, all forms, 19902010

230

Table A3.3 Case notications, 19902010

233

Table A3.4 Treatment outcomes, new smear-positive cases, 19952009

236

Table A3.5 Treatment outcomes, retreatment cases, 19952009

238

Table A3.6 HIV testing and provision of CPT, ART and IPT, 20052010

240

Table A3.7 Testing for MDR-TB and number of conrmed cases of MDR-TB, 20052010

242

Table A3.8 New smear-positive case notication by age and sex, 19952010

244

Table A3.9 Laboratories, NTP services, drug management, human resources and
infection control, 2010

246

Estimates of mortality, prevalence and incidence


Estimated values are shown as best estimates followed by lower and upper bounds. The lower and upper bounds are
de ned as the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of outcome distributions produced in simulations. See ANNEX 1 for further
details.
Estimated numbers are shown rounded to two signicant gures. Estimated rates are shown rounded to three
signicant gures unless the value is under 100, in which case rates are shown rounded to two signicant gures.
Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are re ned, so they
may differ from those published in previous reports in this series. Estimates published in previous global TB control
reports should no longer be used.

Data source
Data shown in this annex are taken from the WHO global TB database on 2 September 2011. Data shown in the main
part of the report were taken from the database on 21 June 2011. As a result, data in this annex may differ slightly from
those in the main part of the report.
Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data.

226

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%

American Samoa

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Australia
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Brunei
1990
Darussalam
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Cambodia
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
China
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
China, Hong Kong 1990
SAR
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
China, Macao
1990
SAR
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Cook Islands
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Fiji
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
French Polynesia 1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Guam
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Japan
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Kiribati
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Lao People's
1990
Democratic
1995
Republic
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Malaysia
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
17
18
19
20
22
22
22
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
10
11
12
13
14
14
14
1 145
1 214
1 269
1 308
1 328
1 335
1 341
6
6
7
7
7
7
7
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
122
124
126
126
127
127
127
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
5
5
6
6
6
6
18
21
23
26
28
28
28

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.036
0.039
0.035
0.039
0.042
0.043
0.045
<0.01
<0.01
0.016
<0.01
<0.01
0.012
0.011
15
13
13
10
9.1
8.8
8.6
220
160
110
86
56
55
54
0.58
0.55
0.53
0.5
0.49
0.45
0.43
0.031
0.036
0.04
0.032
0.032
0.026
0.033
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.039
0.031
0.026
0.022
0.022
0.023
0.031
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
4.3
3.6
2.8
2.4
2.3
2.3
2
<0.01
0.049
0.039
0.054
0.056
0.039
0.046
0.68
1
0.83
0.64
0.64
0.67
0.71
4.3
3.7
2.9
2.8
2.5
2.4
2.4

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0310.044)
(0.0330.046)
(0.0350.035)
(0.0340.047)
(0.0370.051)
(0.0380.053)
(0.0390.053)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0160.017)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0120.013)
(<0.010.013)
(9.820)
(9.818)
(1016)
(7.613)
(6.712)
(6.312)
(6.212)
(190240)
(130200)
(80140)
(8489)
(5458)
(5357)
(5256)
(0.50.7)
(0.480.66)
(0.460.64)
(0.430.6)
(0.420.59)
(0.390.55)
(0.380.52)
(0.0260.037)
(0.0330.041)
(0.0350.049)
(0.0270.038)
(0.0280.039)
(0.0240.03)
(0.0280.04)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0240.06)
(0.0180.051)
(0.0160.04)
(0.0130.035)
(0.0140.033)
(0.0140.037)
(0.0180.049)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.010.011)
(3.75.2)
(3.14.3)
(2.82.8)
(2.42.4)
(2.32.3)
(2.32.3)
(1.72.4)
(<0.010.011)
(0.0290.078)
(0.0220.065)
(0.0310.088)
(0.0330.089)
(0.0220.068)
(0.0270.074)
(0.391.1)
(0.711.4)
(0.551.2)
(0.380.99)
(0.391)
(0.421)
(0.441.1)
(3.65.2)
(34.5)
(2.33.6)
(2.33.4)
(23.1)
(1.93)
(1.93.1)

RATEa

4.8
2.7
<1
2
<1
1.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
2.5
2.5
4.9
1.9
2.2
3.1
2.7
153
120
105
75
66
63
61
19
13
8.7
6.6
4.2
4.1
4.1
10
8.9
7.8
7.3
7.1
6.5
6.1
8.6
9.1
9.3
6.6
6.2
4.9
6.1
<1
2.7
<1
<1
1.1
1.2
<1
5.3
4
3.2
2.7
2.6
2.7
3.6
2.5
3.7
2.8
2.1
1.9
1.7
1.4
3.8
5.6
3
3.5
4.5
5.2
4.9
3.5
2.9
2.3
1.9
1.8
1.8
1.5
8.5
63
46
59
58
40
47
16
21
16
11
11
11
11
24
18
12
11
9.1
8.6
8.5

(3.36.6)
(23.5)
(<11.2)
(1.32.9)
(<11.1)
(<11.7)
(<11.5)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(2.23)
(2.13)
(4.95.2)
(1.72.3)
(2.22.3)
(3.13.2)
(2.33.2)
(103214)
(88158)
(82130)
(5795)
(4886)
(4584)
(4482)
(1721)
(1116)
(6.311)
(6.46.8)
(4.14.4)
(44.3)
(3.94.2)
(8.612)
(7.711)
(6.89.4)
(6.38.8)
(6.18.6)
(5.67.8)
(5.37.3)
(7.410)
(8.310)
(811)
(5.67.9)
(5.37.5)
(4.55.7)
(5.27.3)
(<1<1)
(1.83.7)
(<11.5)
(<11.2)
(<12)
(<12.2)
(<1<1)
(3.28.3)
(2.36.5)
(24.9)
(1.64.2)
(1.63.9)
(1.64.3)
(2.15.7)
(2.13.1)
(3.24.4)
(2.53.3)
(1.92.5)
(1.62.2)
(1.42)
(1.21.6)
(3.34.6)
(4.76.7)
(2.73.6)
(2.94.2)
(3.75.5)
(4.46.2)
(4.26)
(3.14.3)
(2.53.5)
(2.32.3)
(1.91.9)
(1.81.8)
(1.81.8)
(1.31.9)
(5.616)
(37101)
(2677)
(3495)
(3493)
(2369)
(2774)
(9.426)
(1529)
(1022)
(6.717)
(6.517)
(6.817)
(7.117)
(2029)
(1522)
(9.615)
(8.613)
(7.211)
(6.711)
(6.611)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.022
0.012
<0.01
0.013
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
1.4
1.5
1.5
1.5
1.7
1.7
1.8
0.2
0.23
0.44
0.21
0.33
0.3
0.36
120
120
110
100
96
94
93
2500
2400
2200
1800
1600
1500
1500
9.8
9
8.7
8.3
8.4
7.5
7.1
0.52
0.55
0.67
0.53
0.56
0.4
0.58
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.46
0.38
0.32
0.26
0.25
0.28
0.35
0.083
0.13
0.11
0.087
0.082
0.077
0.059
0.085
0.15
0.076
0.11
0.14
0.16
0.15
77
64
58
40
35
35
35
0.099
0.57
0.45
0.65
0.64
0.51
0.55
6.6
8.7
8.1
7.3
7.6
7.8
8.1
41
37
32
32
30
30
30

(<0.010.036)
(<0.010.021)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.022)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.010.014)
(<0.010.014)
(0.52.5)
(0.492.6)
(0.482.5)
(0.52.6)
(0.552.8)
(0.582.9)
(0.623)
(0.0630.35)
(0.0750.4)
(0.160.75)
(0.0550.37)
(0.110.56)
(0.0870.51)
(0.130.61)
(51210)
(52190)
(54190)
(46160)
(43150)
(42150)
(42150)
(23002600)
(21002600)
(18002500)
(16002100)
(14001800)
(13001700)
(13001700)
(3.417)
(2.815)
(2.815)
(2.814)
(314)
(2.413)
(2.212)
(0.190.88)
(0.130.96)
(0.221.1)
(0.190.9)
(0.210.93)
(0.0980.7)
(0.220.96)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.180.78)
(0.140.66)
(0.120.54)
(0.10.44)
(0.0990.42)
(0.10.48)
(0.140.6)
(0.0290.14)
(0.0460.23)
(0.0410.19)
(0.0270.15)
(0.0280.14)
(0.0270.13)
(0.0160.1)
(0.0280.15)
(0.0680.25)
(0.0230.13)
(0.0460.18)
(0.0530.23)
(0.0560.27)
(0.0470.25)
(27130)
(21110)
(2098)
(1368)
(1260)
(1259)
(1159)
(0.0250.18)
(0.220.99)
(0.170.8)
(0.241.1)
(0.251.1)
(0.170.89)
(0.210.95)
(2.812)
(3.915)
(3.614)
(2.913)
(313)
(3.113)
(3.314)
(1965)
(1758)
(1550)
(1449)
(1348)
(1348)
(1349)

RATE

46
24
9.2
21
8.1
12
11
8.4
8.3
7.7
7.4
7.7
7.8
8
81
80
136
59
85
76
91
1258
1032
923
746
692
673
660
215
195
170
140
119
112
108
169
146
128
122
121
107
100
146
137
155
111
108
76
106
3.1
29
15
8.7
15
14
5.5
63
49
39
31
29
32
40
43
62
48
34
31
29
22
64
106
49
64
79
88
81
63
51
46
32
28
27
27
138
741
541
703
666
515
550
157
182
152
128
126
128
130
227
178
136
121
110
108
107

(2177)
(1139)
(316)
(8.935)
(2.615)
(4.921)
(4.120)
(2.914)
(2.714)
(2.513)
(2.413)
(2.613)
(2.613)
(2.814)
(25139)
(26137)
(50230)
(15103)
(29145)
(22130)
(33153)
(5322238)
(4691735)
(4331488)
(3481191)
(3141110)
(3011088)
(2961070)
(201230)
(175215)
(145196)
(120160)
(103136)
(97127)
(93123)
(59286)
(46250)
(41219)
(41208)
(43205)
(35183)
(31172)
(52246)
(31241)
(52266)
(39188)
(40180)
(18132)
(40176)
(<15.5)
(1248)
(4.425)
(2.916)
(4.527)
(4.926)
(1.29.7)
(24107)
(1885)
(1567)
(1254)
(1249)
(1256)
(1670)
(1572)
(21106)
(1779)
(1159)
(1153)
(1049)
(5.837)
(21109)
(47172)
(1584)
(27104)
(30133)
(32149)
(26140)
(22107)
(1787)
(1678)
(1154)
(9.347)
(9.147)
(9.147)
(35248)
(2841284)
(201951)
(2641225)
(2551162)
(177912)
(208952)
(66282)
(81311)
(67257)
(50219)
(50216)
(51217)
(53221)
(107356)
(84278)
(62215)
(55189)
(49174)
(46171)
(46171)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.012
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
1.1
1.2
1.2
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.4
0.17
0.18
0.33
0.2
0.25
0.25
0.27
55
59
61
62
62
62
62
1700
1600
1400
1200
1100
1100
1000
7.5
7.1
6.9
6.5
6.4
5.9
5.7
0.4
0.49
0.52
0.4
0.4
0.37
0.41
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.32
0.27
0.22
0.17
0.16
0.19
0.23
0.063
0.1
0.086
0.071
0.064
0.058
0.05
0.066
0.099
0.062
0.072
0.1
0.12
0.12
60
50
45
31
28
27
27
0.084
0.39
0.31
0.45
0.43
0.4
0.37
3.7
4.1
4.5
5
5.3
5.4
5.6
23
22
22
22
23
23
23

(<0.010.015)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.991.3)
(1.11.4)
(11.3)
(1.11.4)
(1.21.5)
(1.21.6)
(1.21.6)
(0.150.19)
(0.160.21)
(0.280.37)
(0.170.22)
(0.220.28)
(0.220.29)
(0.240.31)
(3874)
(4674)
(5172)
(5371)
(5371)
(5371)
(5372)
(14002200)
(13001900)
(12001600)
(10001400)
(9701300)
(9401200)
(9101200)
(6.68.5)
(6.38.1)
(6.17.8)
(5.77.4)
(5.67.2)
(5.26.7)
(56.4)
(0.350.45)
(0.430.55)
(0.460.59)
(0.350.45)
(0.340.45)
(0.330.42)
(0.360.47)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.260.38)
(0.220.33)
(0.190.27)
(0.130.21)
(0.130.19)
(0.150.23)
(0.180.28)
(0.0550.072)
(0.090.12)
(0.0770.095)
(0.0620.08)
(0.0570.072)
(0.050.066)
(0.0440.056)
(0.0580.075)
(0.0860.11)
(0.0540.07)
(0.0630.082)
(0.090.12)
(0.10.13)
(0.10.13)
(5267)
(4356)
(3951)
(2836)
(2431)
(2431)
(2431)
(0.0660.1)
(0.320.47)
(0.250.38)
(0.360.54)
(0.350.53)
(0.330.48)
(0.30.45)
(2.64.9)
(3.15.3)
(3.55.7)
(46.1)
(4.36.4)
(4.56.5)
(4.66.7)
(2026)
(2025)
(2024)
(2024)
(2125)
(2125)
(2125)

RATE

26
12
6.9
13
6
7.9
7.8
6.6
6.7
6.1
6
6.2
6.3
6.3
66
63
100
55
65
65
68
574
529
492
461
446
442
437
153
129
109
92
83
80
78
129
116
102
96
92
85
80
110
123
121
83
76
70
76
<1
19
12
6.4
12
9.3
3.5
43
35
28
21
19
22
27
32
48
36
28
24
22
18
50
68
40
43
58
66
65
49
40
36
25
22
22
21
116
505
372
488
450
408
370
88
86
85
87
88
89
90
127
108
95
86
83
83
82

(2131)
(9.314)
(5.68.4)
(1015)
(4.97.3)
(6.49.6)
(6.39.5)
(5.87.5)
(5.87.6)
(5.47)
(5.36.8)
(5.47.1)
(5.57.1)
(5.67.1)
(5874)
(5571)
(87114)
(4861)
(5774)
(5773)
(5977)
(398781)
(411662)
(411579)
(397529)
(384513)
(378510)
(373506)
(120189)
(105155)
(92127)
(80105)
(7394)
(7091)
(6888)
(113146)
(102132)
(89115)
(84108)
(81104)
(7496)
(7191)
(96125)
(108138)
(106137)
(7394)
(6687)
(6279)
(6787)
(<11.2)
(1622)
(1114)
(57.8)
(914)
(6.812)
(<17)
(3552)
(2842)
(2333)
(1625)
(1623)
(1827)
(2133)
(2837)
(4254)
(3240)
(2431)
(2227)
(1925)
(1621)
(4456)
(5977)
(3545)
(3849)
(5166)
(5875)
(5773)
(4355)
(3545)
(3140)
(2228)
(1925)
(1924)
(1924)
(92144)
(409611)
(295458)
(394591)
(360549)
(334488)
(297452)
(62118)
(64111)
(67106)
(70105)
(72106)
(73107)
(74107)
(112142)
(97120)
(86104)
(7994)
(7691)
(7590)
(7589)

Western Pacic Region

MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

227

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%
MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)

Marshall Islands

Micronesia
(Federated
States of)

Mongolia

Nauru

New Caledonia

New Zealand

Niue

Northern Mariana
Islands

Palau

Papua New
Guinea

Philippines

Republic of Korea

Samoa

Singapore

Solomon Islands

228

YEAR

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3
4
4
4
4
4
4
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
5
5
6
7
7
7
62
69
77
86
90
92
93
43
45
46
47
48
48
48
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3
3
4
4
5
5
5
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.014
0.015
0.032
0.028
0.038
0.041
0.044
0.024
0.07
0.07
0.056
0.038
0.034
0.033
0.42
0.27
0.19
0.1
0.12
0.13
0.14
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.013
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.012
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
3.2
3.1
2
2.5
2.6
2.8
2.9
29
33
34
35
34
32
31
5.4
5
4.5
3.7
3
2.8
2.6
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.13
0.14
0.13
0.084
0.11
0.11
0.12
0.22
0.19
0.16
0.12
0.096
0.096
0.092

(<0.010.052)
(<0.010.053)
(0.0160.054)
(<0.010.095)
(<0.010.11)
(<0.010.12)
(<0.010.16)
(0.0160.031)
(0.0280.14)
(0.0440.1)
(0.0290.092)
(0.0110.097)
(0.0110.086)
(<0.010.088)
(0.350.5)
(0.220.33)
(0.160.23)
(0.0790.13)
(0.0990.15)
(0.110.16)
(0.110.17)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.016)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.010.011)
(0.0120.012)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(24.9)
(1.75)
(0.884.1)
(1.15)
(1.15.2)
(1.25.5)
(1.35.8)
(1544)
(2144)
(3434)
(2447)
(2346)
(2244)
(2143)
(5.25.6)
(4.85.2)
(4.44.5)
(3.63.7)
(33)
(2.82.8)
(2.52.7)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.110.15)
(0.120.17)
(0.130.13)
(0.0830.084)
(0.0950.14)
(0.0990.14)
(0.10.14)
(0.110.37)
(0.140.24)
(0.120.21)
(0.0790.16)
(0.0640.14)
(0.0640.14)
(0.0620.13)

RATEa

30
30
62
54
71
76
81
25
65
65
51
34
31
29
19
12
7.8
4
4.6
4.9
5
14
5.7
6.6
19
7.3
6.1
3.8
7.7
4.6
3.1
1.9
1.7
1.7
1.7
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3.6
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
6.9
8.7
11
8.9
5.6
6
5.7
4.2
14
25
9.5
9.3
15
15
78
65
37
41
40
42
43
47
47
44
40
37
35
33
13
11
9.7
7.8
6.3
5.8
5.4
4.4
3.2
2.7
1.4
2.2
1.8
1.3
4.1
4
3.2
2
2.3
2.3
2.3
71
52
40
25
19
18
17

(3.5109)
(6.8103)
(31103)
(13183)
(17215)
(18225)
(17295)
(1732)
(26127)
(4195)
(2784)
(1088)
(9.878)
(8.979)
(1623)
(9.614)
(6.49.4)
(3.15.2)
(3.75.6)
(45.9)
(4.26)
(8.421)
(3.39.2)
(3.811)
(1230)
(412)
(3.510)
(2.26.5)
(6.69.2)
(45.5)
(2.73.9)
(1.62.2)
(1.52.1)
(1.52.1)
(1.52)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(2.94.3)
(<11.2)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(5.59)
(6.911)
(8.515)
(712)
(4.67.1)
(4.68)
(4.67.5)
(2.47.3)
(824)
(1637)
(5.914)
(5.416)
(8.925)
(8.724)
(47117)
(36106)
(1676)
(1882)
(1779)
(1882)
(1984)
(2471)
(3064)
(4444)
(2855)
(2651)
(2449)
(2246)
(1213)
(1112)
(9.79.7)
(7.77.8)
(6.36.3)
(5.85.9)
(5.15.6)
(2.57.1)
(1.75.8)
(1.45.1)
(<12.6)
(1.72.9)
(1.22.7)
(<12.1)
(3.64.9)
(3.44.9)
(3.23.3)
(1.92)
(22.8)
(22.8)
(22.8)
(35120)
(3968)
(2952)
(1734)
(1227)
(1226)
(1124)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.13
0.16
0.28
0.3
0.39
0.41
0.45
0.42
0.65
0.61
0.51
0.39
0.37
0.36
20
14
11
7.7
8.4
8.8
9.1
0.014
<0.01
<0.01
0.022
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.22
0.15
0.11
0.068
0.069
0.071
0.069
0.46
0.5
0.49
0.49
0.49
0.44
0.41
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.055
0.088
0.14
0.11
0.061
0.068
0.061
<0.01
0.033
0.05
0.021
0.025
0.037
0.037
27
28
23
28
29
31
32
620
630
600
540
490
480
470
96
90
85
79
75
74
73
0.084
0.068
0.059
0.038
0.041
0.036
0.029
2.3
2.7
2.5
1.9
2.1
2.2
2.2
1.9
1.7
1.5
1.1
1
0.99
0.96

(0.0170.46)
(0.0310.49)
(0.110.55)
(0.0590.91)
(0.0841.1)
(0.0921.1)
(0.0781.5)
(0.0880.7)
(0.231.4)
(0.271.1)
(0.210.97)
(0.10.95)
(0.0980.87)
(0.0880.88)
(9.132)
(6.722)
(517)
(2.912)
(3.513)
(3.814)
(3.914)
(<0.010.024)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.010.037)
(<0.010.015)
(<0.010.013)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0790.37)
(0.0530.25)
(0.0330.19)
(0.020.12)
(0.0220.12)
(0.0220.12)
(0.0210.12)
(0.140.79)
(0.150.86)
(0.140.85)
(0.160.83)
(0.190.8)
(0.150.75)
(0.130.7)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0210.096)
(0.0320.16)
(0.0520.24)
(0.0430.19)
(0.0210.11)
(0.0260.12)
(0.0220.11)
(<0.010.015)
(0.010.058)
(0.0220.084)
(<0.010.036)
(<0.010.045)
(0.0140.065)
(0.0140.064)
(1150)
(1152)
(7.547)
(9.555)
(9.958)
(1161)
(1163)
(470790)
(480800)
(470740)
(460630)
(440550)
(420540)
(410530)
(77110)
(73110)
(68100)
(6394)
(6090)
(5989)
(5888)
(0.0310.15)
(0.0230.12)
(0.0190.11)
(0.0110.068)
(0.0190.066)
(0.0150.06)
(0.0110.05)
(0.733.9)
(0.934.6)
(0.874.2)
(0.663.3)
(0.733.6)
(0.743.7)
(0.773.8)
(0.753.8)
(0.782.8)
(0.682.4)
(0.511.9)
(0.441.7)
(0.431.7)
(0.421.6)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

RATE

269
314
540
581
739
773
831
433
606
570
463
358
333
320
910
611
442
301
316
326
331
155
68
71
214
83
74
52
131
78
51
30
28
29
28
14
14
13
12
11
10
9.3
<1
68
19
<1
<1
<1
<1
125
154
201
163
97
110
100
58
188
259
104
126
180
179
659
588
437
454
449
460
465
1003
904
775
633
548
520
502
223
203
184
167
157
154
151
52
41
33
21
23
20
16
77
77
63
46
45
44
44
625
472
360
245
198
189
178

(37980)
(60957)
(2121058)
(1131743)
(1592086)
(1732120)
(1452724)
(91730)
(2131280)
(2501015)
(189883)
(95861)
(88786)
(80796)
(4171466)
(292964)
(207692)
(115490)
(132506)
(139517)
(142522)
(62267)
(25118)
(29126)
(86370)
(31148)
(27129)
(1692)
(47220)
(28131)
(1589)
(8.651)
(9.148)
(9.150)
(8.248)
(4.223)
(4.223)
(3.622)
(3.820)
(4.419)
(3.517)
(2.916)
(<1<1)
(15120)
(4.233)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(48217)
(55272)
(76353)
(63284)
(34168)
(42195)
(35176)
(18102)
(59335)
(113437)
(43180)
(40224)
(68318)
(67314)
(2741214)
(2431103)
(140866)
(155900)
(151882)
(160913)
(161925)
(7651277)
(6871149)
(614957)
(542731)
(484612)
(456584)
(438566)
(179267)
(163242)
(148220)
(134200)
(126189)
(124185)
(121182)
(1991)
(1374)
(1162)
(6.138)
(1036)
(8.333)
(5.927)
(24131)
(27131)
(22107)
(1677)
(1576)
(1575)
(1575)
(2441234)
(218777)
(166592)
(110407)
(86332)
(83318)
(78298)

0.065
0.097
0.14
0.19
0.23
0.25
0.27
0.36
0.35
0.3
0.26
0.24
0.23
0.23
8.9
7.2
6.1
5.7
5.9
6.1
6.2
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.014
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.17
0.11
0.087
0.056
0.055
0.056
0.057
0.37
0.41
0.42
0.39
0.36
0.35
0.33
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.038
0.062
0.092
0.074
0.045
0.045
0.044
<0.01
0.025
0.03
0.013
0.019
0.025
0.025
13
14
16
18
20
20
21
240
250
250
260
260
260
260
70
46
36
41
44
46
47
0.058
0.05
0.041
0.031
0.024
0.022
0.02
1.9
2.1
2
1.6
1.7
1.8
1.8
0.97
0.86
0.75
0.67
0.62
0.6
0.58

(<0.010.2)
(0.0220.23)
(0.0830.2)
(0.0460.43)
(0.0670.5)
(0.0710.54)
(0.0460.69)
(0.0930.82)
(0.190.55)
(0.210.4)
(0.170.37)
(0.10.44)
(0.110.41)
(0.0950.42)
(7.510)
(6.38.2)
(5.56.8)
(5.36.2)
(5.56.4)
(5.66.5)
(5.76.6)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.017)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.150.19)
(0.10.13)
(0.0740.1)
(0.050.064)
(0.0480.061)
(0.0480.064)
(0.050.064)
(0.330.43)
(0.350.47)
(0.370.47)
(0.340.44)
(0.320.4)
(0.30.39)
(0.290.38)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.030.046)
(0.050.076)
(0.0730.11)
(0.0590.09)
(0.0370.053)
(0.0360.056)
(0.0360.053)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.020.031)
(0.0240.036)
(0.0110.016)
(0.0160.023)
(0.020.031)
(0.020.031)
(8.218)
(9.320)
(1123)
(1226)
(1328)
(1329)
(1429)
(150360)
(200300)
(210310)
(210310)
(210310)
(210310)
(210310)
(6180)
(4052)
(3340)
(3647)
(3950)
(4051)
(4153)
(0.0470.071)
(0.0380.063)
(0.030.054)
(0.0250.038)
(0.0210.028)
(0.0180.027)
(0.0160.024)
(1.72.1)
(1.92.4)
(1.72.2)
(1.41.8)
(1.51.9)
(1.62)
(1.62)
(0.591.4)
(0.71)
(0.610.91)
(0.540.8)
(0.50.74)
(0.490.72)
(0.480.7)

RATE

137
190
263
363
441
471
502
379
325
279
240
219
212
206
405
314
254
225
222
224
224
102
47
45
139
55
51
40
99
59
41
24
22
23
23
11
11
11
9.5
8.4
8
7.6
74
57
40
23
13
9.9
6.5
86
109
135
110
71
74
72
45
147
156
67
95
125
124
303
303
303
303
303
303
303
393
360
329
301
285
280
275
163
102
79
88
93
95
97
36
30
23
17
13
12
11
62
61
50
37
36
36
35
312
240
185
142
121
115
108

(11417)
(42445)
(158393)
(89826)
(126949)
(1341014)
(851279)
(96850)
(181510)
(198374)
(156341)
(94395)
(98370)
(86377)
(344471)
(273357)
(227281)
(206244)
(206239)
(208240)
(208240)
(82124)
(3857)
(3557)
(111170)
(4269)
(4163)
(3248)
(87111)
(5366)
(3548)
(2228)
(2025)
(1926)
(2026)
(9.613)
(9.513)
(9.512)
(8.311)
(7.49.4)
(79)
(6.68.7)
(<1148)
(<1114)
(<181)
(<147)
(<127)
(<120)
(<113)
(69104)
(87133)
(107166)
(88134)
(6084)
(5892)
(5887)
(3655)
(118178)
(126190)
(5481)
(77116)
(100151)
(100150)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(239585)
(293434)
(268396)
(245362)
(232343)
(229336)
(226329)
(142186)
(89117)
(7286)
(76100)
(82105)
(83107)
(85110)
(2944)
(2337)
(1730)
(1421)
(1215)
(9.815)
(8.913)
(5570)
(5369)
(4457)
(3241)
(3141)
(3140)
(3140)
(190464)
(195290)
(150223)
(116171)
(99146)
(94138)
(89130)

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($(VWLPDWHVRIWKHEXUGHQRIGLVHDVHFDXVHGE\7%
MORTALITY (EXCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Tonga
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Tuvalu
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Vanuatu
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Viet Nam
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
Wallis and Futuna 1990
Islands
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
67
74
79
83
86
87
88
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.012
<0.01
0.026
0.028
0.023
0.023
0.014
29
32
27
28
29
29
29
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.016)
(<0.010.016)
(<0.010.012)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.023)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0150.041)
(0.0180.04)
(0.0140.035)
(0.0140.035)
(<0.010.027)
(2041)
(2145)
(1641)
(1742)
(1744)
(1844)
(1943)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

RATEa

6.6
2.5
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
6.1
4.6
3.7
3
2.3
3
2.9
94
60
71
57
35
35
33
8.2
4.1
14
13
10
9.7
5.8
44
43
35
33
33
34
34
12
6.1
6.6
5
4.2
4.8
4.8

(3.812)
(23.1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(4.38.4)
(3.16.7)
(2.16.2)
(1.84.8)
(1.43.6)
(2.43.7)
(2.13.9)
(42174)
(19169)
(35123)
(3094)
(1284)
(1288)
(1275)
(5.915)
(3.35)
(8.222)
(8.819)
(6.215)
(615)
(2.811)
(2962)
(2961)
(2152)
(2051)
(2051)
(2151)
(2149)
(1112)
(5.47)
(5.57.9)
(4.25.9)
(3.74.7)
(4.55.2)
(4.55.2)

PREVALENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.06
0.049
0.041
0.034
0.028
0.031
0.03
0.084
0.062
0.063
0.052
0.038
0.038
0.036
0.21
0.13
0.3
0.29
0.26
0.26
0.19
270
290
270
280
290
290
290
0.024
0.015
0.023
0.014
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0270.098)
(0.020.081)
(0.0160.074)
(0.0130.06)
(0.0110.049)
(0.0150.05)
(0.0140.049)
(0.0310.17)
(0.0150.16)
(0.0250.12)
(0.0210.097)
(0.0110.086)
(0.010.088)
(0.0110.078)
(0.0490.38)
(0.0290.23)
(0.120.52)
(0.130.48)
(0.10.44)
(0.10.44)
(0.0710.34)
(120460)
(130500)
(120470)
(120490)
(120500)
(130500)
(130510)
(<0.010.043)
(<0.010.025)
(0.0110.036)
(<0.010.022)
(<0.010.016)
(<0.010.018)
(<0.010.017)

RATE

93
49
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
63
51
42
34
28
30
29
930
674
666
534
391
385
366
145
78
161
136
113
109
78
396
393
345
336
333
334
334
175
109
161
96
68
72
72

(27168)
(1186)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(28103)
(2185)
(1675)
(1359)
(1147)
(1448)
(1348)
(3471847)
(1611684)
(2611296)
(2191003)
(110874)
(105901)
(109795)
(33256)
(17139)
(62279)
(60228)
(45193)
(44186)
(30142)
(179682)
(176675)
(148601)
(143587)
(144579)
(145580)
(147576)
(39309)
(45175)
(73249)
(43154)
(23114)
(16128)
(16128)

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.036
0.032
0.027
0.023
0.02
0.019
0.017
0.048
0.04
0.034
0.028
0.025
0.024
0.023
0.19
0.11
0.2
0.17
0.17
0.17
0.17
140
150
160
170
170
170
180
0.012
0.011
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.030.042)
(0.0260.037)
(0.0210.034)
(0.0180.028)
(0.0160.023)
(0.0160.021)
(0.0150.021)
(0.0310.07)
(0.0160.076)
(0.0210.048)
(0.0190.039)
(0.0130.041)
(0.0120.042)
(0.0130.037)
(0.150.23)
(0.0850.13)
(0.160.25)
(0.140.21)
(0.140.2)
(0.140.2)
(0.140.2)
(100180)
(110190)
(120210)
(130220)
(130220)
(130220)
(130220)
(0.0110.013)
(0.010.012)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

RATE

72
39
13
<1
<1
<1
<1
38
33
28
22
19
18
17
536
437
357
291
258
247
237
127
63
110
83
74
72
69
204
204
205
204
201
200
199
85
77
68
60
54
53
51

(5690)
(1282)
(<126)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(3245)
(2839)
(2235)
(1828)
(1623)
(1620)
(1420)
(343772)
(174819)
(228514)
(196404)
(133423)
(118423)
(133371)
(103155)
(5076)
(88133)
(67100)
(6190)
(5986)
(5783)
(153262)
(154262)
(154263)
(154261)
(152258)
(152255)
(152253)
(7893)
(7183)
(6670)
(5367)
(5059)
(4363)
(4261)

Western Pacic Region

Tokelau

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

229

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

American Samoa

Australia

Brunei
Darussalam

Cambodia

China

China, Hong Kong


SAR

China, Macao
SAR

Cook Islands

Fiji

French Polynesia

Guam

Japan

Kiribati

Lao People's
Democratic
Republic

230

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
17
18
19
20
22
22
22
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
10
11
12
13
14
14
14
1 145
1 214
1 269
1 308
1 328
1 335
1 341
6
6
7
7
7
7
7
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
122
124
126
126
127
127
127
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
5
5
6
6
6
6

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.012
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
1.1
1.2
1.2
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.4
0.17
0.18
0.33
0.2
0.25
0.25
0.27
55
59
61
62
62
62
62
1700
1600
1400
1200
1100
1100
1000
7.5
7.1
6.9
6.5
6.4
5.9
5.7
0.4
0.49
0.52
0.4
0.4
0.37
0.41
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.32
0.27
0.22
0.17
0.16
0.19
0.23
0.063
0.1
0.086
0.071
0.064
0.058
0.05
0.066
0.099
0.062
0.072
0.1
0.12
0.12
60
50
45
31
28
27
27
0.084
0.39
0.31
0.45
0.43
0.4
0.37
3.7
4.1
4.5
5
5.3
5.4
5.6

(<0.010.015)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.991.3)
(1.11.4)
(11.3)
(1.11.4)
(1.21.5)
(1.21.6)
(1.21.6)
(0.150.19)
(0.160.21)
(0.280.37)
(0.170.22)
(0.220.28)
(0.220.29)
(0.240.31)
(3874)
(4674)
(5172)
(5371)
(5371)
(5371)
(5372)
(14002200)
(13001900)
(12001600)
(10001400)
(9701300)
(9401200)
(9101200)
(6.68.5)
(6.38.1)
(6.17.8)
(5.77.4)
(5.67.2)
(5.26.7)
(56.4)
(0.350.45)
(0.430.55)
(0.460.59)
(0.350.45)
(0.340.45)
(0.330.42)
(0.360.47)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.260.38)
(0.220.33)
(0.190.27)
(0.130.21)
(0.130.19)
(0.150.23)
(0.180.28)
(0.0550.072)
(0.090.12)
(0.0770.095)
(0.0620.08)
(0.0570.072)
(0.050.066)
(0.0440.056)
(0.0580.075)
(0.0860.11)
(0.0540.07)
(0.0630.082)
(0.090.12)
(0.10.13)
(0.10.13)
(5267)
(4356)
(3951)
(2836)
(2431)
(2431)
(2431)
(0.0660.1)
(0.320.47)
(0.250.38)
(0.360.54)
(0.350.53)
(0.330.48)
(0.30.45)
(2.64.9)
(3.15.3)
(3.55.7)
(46.1)
(4.36.4)
(4.56.5)
(4.66.7)

RATEb

26
12
6.9
13
6
7.9
7.8
6.6
6.7
6.1
6
6.2
6.3
6.3
66
63
100
55
65
65
68
574
529
492
461
446
442
437
153
129
109
92
83
80
78
129
116
102
96
92
85
80
110
123
121
83
76
70
76
<1
19
12
6.4
12
9.3
3.5
43
35
28
21
19
22
27
32
48
36
28
24
22
18
50
68
40
43
58
66
65
49
40
36
25
22
22
21
116
505
372
488
450
408
370
88
86
85
87
88
89
90

(2131)
(9.314)
(5.68.4)
(1015)
(4.97.3)
(6.49.6)
(6.39.5)
(5.87.5)
(5.87.6)
(5.47)
(5.36.8)
(5.47.1)
(5.57.1)
(5.67.1)
(5874)
(5571)
(87114)
(4861)
(5774)
(5773)
(5977)
(398781)
(411662)
(411579)
(397529)
(384513)
(378510)
(373506)
(120189)
(105155)
(92127)
(80105)
(7394)
(7091)
(6888)
(113146)
(102132)
(89115)
(84108)
(81104)
(7496)
(7191)
(96125)
(108138)
(106137)
(7394)
(6687)
(6279)
(6787)
(<11.2)
(1622)
(1114)
(57.8)
(914)
(6.812)
(<17)
(3552)
(2842)
(2333)
(1625)
(1623)
(1827)
(2133)
(2837)
(4254)
(3240)
(2431)
(2227)
(1925)
(1621)
(4456)
(5977)
(3545)
(3849)
(5166)
(5875)
(5773)
(4355)
(3545)
(3140)
(2228)
(1925)
(1924)
(1924)
(92144)
(409611)
(295458)
(394591)
(360549)
(334488)
(297452)
(62118)
(64111)
(67106)
(70105)
(72106)
(73107)
(74107)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.03
0.029
0.03
0.039
0.047
0.05
0.052

(0.0170.048)
(0.0170.045)
(0.0170.046)
(0.0240.058)
(0.0280.072)
(0.0310.073)
(0.0320.077)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

<1 (<12.1)

<0.01
<0.01
2.1
5.7
6.1
4.8
4.2
4
4
0.79
10
12
16
18
18
18

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.794.1)
(3.48.6)
(3.98.8)
(3.16.9)
(2.66.2)
(2.26.2)
(3.44.7)
(0.231.7)
(4.218)
(619)
(9.425)
(1128)
(1028)
(1028)

<1
<1
22
51
49
36
30
28
29
<1
<1
<1
1.3
1.4
1.3
1.4

(<11.9)
(<11.4)
(8.343)
(3077)
(3271)
(2352)
(1945)
(1644)
(2433)
(<1<1)
(<11.5)
(<11.5)
(<11.9)
(<12.1)
(<12.1)
(<12.1)

0.054
0.032
0.057
0.042

(0.0360.076)
(<0.010.078)
(0.0390.079)
(0.0270.06)

<1
<1
<1
<1

(<11.1)
(<11.1)
(<11.1)
(<1<1)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

<1
<1
<1
<1

(<11.1)
(<11)
(<1<1)
(<11.6)

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.012)

<0.01 (<0.010.011)
<0.01
0.17
0.14
0.14
0.11
0.1
0.1
0.1

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.014
0.088
0.17
0.21
0.24

(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0860.27)
(0.0740.24)
(0.0690.22)
(0.0570.17)
(0.0530.17)
(0.0550.16)
(0.0550.17)

(<0.010.016)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.037)
(0.0420.15)
(0.0970.27)
(0.110.33)
(0.130.38)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.3)

19

3
6
3
4
4
1 016
1 073
1 043
1 046
1 213
1 217
1 187
143

5
10
5
6
6
6
6
5
5
6
6
5
57

307
163
223
213
237
6 501
14 603
18 891
35 535
38 927
39 202
40 460
375 481
515 764
454 372
894 428
975 821
965 257
908 399
6 510
6 212
6 015
5 660
5 544
5 160
4 935
343
402
449
355
359
308
368
0
2
1
1
2
2
0
226
203
144
132
106
144
189
59

94
45
58
54
59
68
131
152
266
282
280
286
33
42
36
68
73
72
68
112
101
89
83
80
74
70
95
101
104
74
69
58
68
0
11
6
5
10
10
0
31
26
18
16
13
17
22
30

62
63
50
53
41

26
25
19
20
15

54
63
89
102
101
51 821
43 078
39 384
27 194
24 181
23 631
22 693
68

35
37
51
57
56
42
35
31
22
19
19
18
95

252
332
335
278
286
1 826
830
2 227
3 699
4 045
3 848
3 999

300
361
347
284
287
44
17
42
64
67
63
64

2 (<16.3)
1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

5
2.6
<1
<1
<1
1.5
2.9
3.4
3.9

(<15)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

(<116)
(1.83.5)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<12.6)
(1.64.5)
(1.95.4)
(2.26.2)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

RATEb

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

<0.01 (<0.01<0.01)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

75

75
75
75
75
75
90
89
89
85
90
88
84
86

94
82
89
84
88
12
25
31
58
63
64
65
21
33
33
74
88
90
87
87
87
87
87
87
87
87
87
82
86
89
91
82
89
0
58
46
81
87
107
0
72
76
64
78
66
76
82
93

72
89
78
92
82

87
87
87
87
87
87
87
88
87
87
87
84
81

81
74
77
70
78
50
20
49
74
76
71
72

(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(79103)
(78102)
(78102)
(7597)
(80104)
(78101)
(7596)
(7699)
(82108)
(7393)
(78102)
(7596)
(78101)
(917)
(2032)
(2637)
(5067)
(5573)
(5574)
(5777)
(1727)
(2740)
(2839)
(6586)
(78101)
(79103)
(77100)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7393)
(7698)
(78101)
(80104)
(7393)
(78102)
(5068)
(4153)
(66102)
(69111)
(82147)
(5988)
(6294)
(5477)
(6498)
(5680)
(6294)
(66104)
(82108)
(6580)
(78102)
(7088)
(81106)
(7393)

(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(7799)
(78101)
(7799)
(77100)
(7799)
(7496)
(66103)
(65102)
(6192)
(6396)
(5885)
(6497)
(3770)
(1627)
(3963)
(6192)
(6393)
(5986)
(6088)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV

Malaysia

Marshall Islands

Micronesia
(Federated
States of)

Mongolia

Nauru

New Caledonia

New Zealand

Niue

Northern Mariana
Islands

Palau

Papua New
Guinea

Philippines

Republic of Korea

Samoa

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

18
21
23
26
28
28
28
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
3
4
4
4
4
4
4
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
4
5
5
6
7
7
7
62
69
77
86
90
92
93
43
45
46
47
48
48
48
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

23
22
22
22
23
23
23
0.065
0.097
0.14
0.19
0.23
0.25
0.27
0.36
0.35
0.3
0.26
0.24
0.23
0.23
8.9
7.2
6.1
5.7
5.9
6.1
6.2
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.014
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.17
0.11
0.087
0.056
0.055
0.056
0.057
0.37
0.41
0.42
0.39
0.36
0.35
0.33
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.038
0.062
0.092
0.074
0.045
0.045
0.044
<0.01
0.025
0.03
0.013
0.019
0.025
0.025
13
14
16
18
20
20
21
240
250
250
260
260
260
260
70
46
36
41
44
46
47
0.058
0.05
0.041
0.031
0.024
0.022
0.02

(2026)
(2025)
(2024)
(2024)
(2125)
(2125)
(2125)
(<0.010.2)
(0.0220.23)
(0.0830.2)
(0.0460.43)
(0.0670.5)
(0.0710.54)
(0.0460.69)
(0.0930.82)
(0.190.55)
(0.210.4)
(0.170.37)
(0.10.44)
(0.110.41)
(0.0950.42)
(7.510)
(6.38.2)
(5.56.8)
(5.36.2)
(5.56.4)
(5.66.5)
(5.76.6)
(<0.010.011)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.0110.017)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.150.19)
(0.10.13)
(0.0740.1)
(0.050.064)
(0.0480.061)
(0.0480.064)
(0.050.064)
(0.330.43)
(0.350.47)
(0.370.47)
(0.340.44)
(0.320.4)
(0.30.39)
(0.290.38)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.030.046)
(0.050.076)
(0.0730.11)
(0.0590.09)
(0.0370.053)
(0.0360.056)
(0.0360.053)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.020.031)
(0.0240.036)
(0.0110.016)
(0.0160.023)
(0.020.031)
(0.020.031)
(8.218)
(9.320)
(1123)
(1226)
(1328)
(1329)
(1429)
(150360)
(200300)
(210310)
(210310)
(210310)
(210310)
(210310)
(6180)
(4052)
(3340)
(3647)
(3950)
(4051)
(4153)
(0.0470.071)
(0.0380.063)
(0.030.054)
(0.0250.038)
(0.0210.028)
(0.0180.027)
(0.0160.024)

RATEb

127
108
95
86
83
83
82
137
190
263
363
441
471
502
379
325
279
240
219
212
206
405
314
254
225
222
224
224
102
47
45
139
55
51
40
99
59
41
24
22
23
23
11
11
11
9.5
8.4
8
7.6
74
57
40
23
13
9.9
6.5
86
109
135
110
71
74
72
45
147
156
67
95
125
124
303
303
303
303
303
303
303
393
360
329
301
285
280
275
163
102
79
88
93
95
97
36
30
23
17
13
12
11

(112142)
(97120)
(86104)
(7994)
(7691)
(7590)
(7589)
(11417)
(42445)
(158393)
(89826)
(126949)
(1341014)
(851279)
(96850)
(181510)
(198374)
(156341)
(94395)
(98370)
(86377)
(344471)
(273357)
(227281)
(206244)
(206239)
(208240)
(208240)
(82124)
(3857)
(3557)
(111170)
(4269)
(4163)
(3248)
(87111)
(5366)
(3548)
(2228)
(2025)
(1926)
(2026)
(9.613)
(9.513)
(9.512)
(8.311)
(7.49.4)
(79)
(6.68.7)
(<1148)
(<1114)
(<181)
(<147)
(<127)
(<120)
(<113)
(69104)
(87133)
(107166)
(88134)
(6084)
(5892)
(5887)
(3655)
(118178)
(126190)
(5481)
(77116)
(100151)
(100150)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(197430)
(239585)
(293434)
(268396)
(245362)
(232343)
(229336)
(226329)
(142186)
(89117)
(7286)
(76100)
(82105)
(83107)
(85110)
(2944)
(2337)
(1730)
(1421)
(1215)
(9.815)
(8.913)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.36
1.5
2.1
2.6
2.8
2.6
2.3

(0.150.66)
(0.972.2)
(1.42.9)
(2.42.9)
(2.63.1)
(2.32.8)
(2.12.5)

2
7.4
8.8
10
10
9.2
8

9.6 (<137)

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

0.015
0.077
0.3
0.64
0.76
0.79
0.83
0.016
0.068
0.19
0.42
0.73
0.88
1
0.13
0.099
0.11
0.26
0.28
0.3
0.33

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.010.012)

(<0.010.052)
(0.0150.19)
(0.140.51)
(0.361)
(0.371.3)
(0.461.2)
(0.481.3)
(<0.010.032)
(0.0260.13)
(0.0280.51)
(0.150.82)
(0.361.2)
(0.421.5)
(0.511.8)
(0.0410.28)
(0.0320.2)
(0.0650.16)
(0.140.41)
(0.150.45)
(0.160.48)
(0.170.52)

<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

<1
1.6
5.5
11
12
12
12
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
1.1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER

RATEb

11 702
11 778
15 057
15 342
17 144
17 341
18 517

64
57
64
59
62
62
65

34
111
125
135
190
367
172
91
98
164
148
160
1 659
2 780
3 109
4 601
4 490
4 481
4 458
7

65
213
236
253
352
381
160
85
90
149
134
144
76
121
129
181
168
165
162
76

4
11
5
4
3
143
87
94
47
44
54
49
348
391
344
332
292
298
301
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
28
48
75
57
28
38
32

40
109
49
39
29
84
46
44
20
18
22
20
10
11
9
8
7
7
7
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
64
83
110
85
45
62
53

19

110

10

50

19
19
2 497
8 041
10 520
12 564
13 984
12 306
14 531
317 008
119 186
119 914
137 100
139 603
146 565
166 323
63 904
42 117
21 782
38 290
36 847
38 741
41 889
44
45
43
24
12
16
14

93
93
60
171
196
206
214
184
212
514
172
155
160
155
160
178
149
94
47
81
77
81
87
27
27
24
13
7
9
8

(<13.6)
(4.711)
(5.812)
(9.111)
(9.411)
(8.410)
(7.38.7)

<0.01 (<0.010.02)

(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)

(<11.2)
(<14)
(2.69.6)
(5.917)
(5.620)
(6.818)
(719)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11.4)
(<11.6)
(<11.9)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<11)
(<11.1)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

51
53
68
68
75
75
80

25
59
54
54
70
101
49
30
37
68
63
70
19
38
51
80
76
74
72
75

88
78
89
76
73
85
77
108
83
81
97
86
93
96
83
85
82
86
90
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
74
77
81
77
63
84
73

75

75

75
75
20
56
65
68
71
61
70
131
48
47
53
54
57
65
91
92
60
93
83
85
90
76
90
104
78
49
73
71

(4557)
(4759)
(6275)
(6375)
(6982)
(6982)
(7387)

(1741)
(26240)
(25188)
(25189)
(27412)
(45396)
(3188)
(2343)
(2657)
(38158)
(36137)
(38168)
(1622)
(3444)
(4657)
(7488)
(7082)
(6980)
(6778)
(6293)
(70114)
(6498)
(71116)
(6395)
(6191)
(7697)
(6986)
(93127)
(7494)
(7291)
(85113)
(7698)
(81107)
(84112)
(7394)
(7596)
(7392)
(7698)
(79104)

(6192)
(6396)
(66103)
(6396)
(5375)
(68107)
(6090)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(1430)
(4086)
(4599)
(48104)
(50108)
(4393)
(49107)
(88215)
(4059)
(3958)
(4466)
(4567)
(4870)
(5479)
(80105)
(81106)
(5565)
(81107)
(7494)
(7597)
(79103)
(6294)
(71117)
(80141)
(6497)
(4357)
(6089)
(5986)

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Western Pacic Region

INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)


YEAR

231

7$%/($,QFLGHQFHQRWLILFDWLRQDQGFDVHGHWHFWLRQUDWHVDOOIRUPV
INCIDENCE (INCLUDING HIV)
YEAR

Singapore

Solomon Islands

Tokelau

Tonga

Tuvalu

Vanuatu

Viet Nam

Wallis and Futuna


Islands

232

POPULATION
(MILLIONS)

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

3
3
4
4
5
5
5
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
67
74
79
83
86
87
88
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1

NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

1.9
2.1
2
1.6
1.7
1.8
1.8
0.97
0.86
0.75
0.67
0.62
0.6
0.58
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
0.036
0.032
0.027
0.023
0.02
0.019
0.017
0.048
0.04
0.034
0.028
0.025
0.024
0.023
0.19
0.11
0.2
0.17
0.17
0.17
0.17
140
150
160
170
170
170
180
0.012
0.011
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01
<0.01

(1.72.1)
(1.92.4)
(1.72.2)
(1.41.8)
(1.51.9)
(1.62)
(1.62)
(0.591.4)
(0.71)
(0.610.91)
(0.540.8)
(0.50.74)
(0.490.72)
(0.480.7)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(0.030.042)
(0.0260.037)
(0.0210.034)
(0.0180.028)
(0.0160.023)
(0.0160.021)
(0.0150.021)
(0.0310.07)
(0.0160.076)
(0.0210.048)
(0.0190.039)
(0.0130.041)
(0.0120.042)
(0.0130.037)
(0.150.23)
(0.0850.13)
(0.160.25)
(0.140.21)
(0.140.2)
(0.140.2)
(0.140.2)
(100180)
(110190)
(120210)
(130220)
(130220)
(130220)
(130220)
(0.0110.013)
(0.010.012)
(<0.010.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)
(<0.01<0.01)

RATEb

62
61
50
37
36
36
35
312
240
185
142
121
115
108
72
39
13
<1
<1
<1
<1
38
33
28
22
19
18
17
536
437
357
291
258
247
237
127
63
110
83
74
72
69
204
204
205
204
201
200
199
85
77
68
60
54
53
51

(5570)
(5369)
(4457)
(3241)
(3141)
(3140)
(3140)
(190464)
(195290)
(150223)
(116171)
(99146)
(94138)
(89130)
(5690)
(1282)
(<126)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(<1<1)
(3245)
(2839)
(2235)
(1828)
(1623)
(1620)
(1420)
(343772)
(174819)
(228514)
(196404)
(133423)
(118423)
(133371)
(103155)
(5076)
(88133)
(67100)
(6190)
(5986)
(5783)
(153262)
(154262)
(154263)
(154261)
(152258)
(152255)
(152253)
(7893)
(7183)
(6670)
(5367)
(5059)
(4363)
(4261)

INCIDENCE HIV-POSITIVE
NUMBER
(THOUSANDS)

0.026
0.083
0.09
0.073
0.079
0.081
0.081

0.05
0.39
1.4
3.5
6.2
7.1
7.3
7.6

(0.0160.04)
(0.0430.14)
(0.0510.14)
(0.0440.11)
(0.0450.12)
(0.0590.11)
(0.0590.11)

(0.0260.078)
(0.110.85)
(0.72.3)
(2.15.3)
(3.89.3)
(411)
(4.511)
(4.611)

NOTIFIED NEW AND RELAPSEa

RATEb

<1
2.4
2.3
1.7
1.6
1.6
1.6

21
<1
1.9
4.5
7.5
8.3
8.4
8.6

(<11.3)
(1.23.9)
(1.33.6)
(12.6)
(<12.6)
(1.22.2)
(1.22.1)

(1133)
(<11.3)
(<13.2)
(2.76.7)
(4.511)
(4.713)
(5.213)
(5.213)

Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Rates are per 100 000 population.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

NUMBER

RATEb

1 591
1 889
1 728
1 356
1 548
1 525
1 560
382
352
302
397
387
366
338
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
23
20
24
18
13
8
11
23
36
16
12
17
18
14
140
79
152
76
103
134
116
50 203
55 739
89 792
94 916
97 772
95 036
94 867

53
54
44
32
32
31
31
123
99
74
85
76
70
63
62
132
0
0
0
0
0
24
21
25
18
13
8
11
255
390
170
124
174
184
142
95
47
82
36
45
57
48
75
75
114
114
114
109
108

42

49

9
9

66
66

CASE DETECTION RATEa


PERCENT

85
89
88
87
91
86
87
40
41
40
60
63
61
58
86
335
0

64
63
88
79
66
43
63
48
89
48
43
67
74
60
75
75
75
44
61
80
70
37
37
56
56
56
55
54

55

83

125
129

(7596)
(78101)
(77100)
(7799)
(80104)
(7698)
(7799)
(2765)
(3451)
(3349)
(4973)
(5277)
(5175)
(4871)
(69111)
(1601098)

(5477)
(5476)
(70113)
(65100)
(5680)
(3949)
(5476)
(3375)
(48224)
(3374)
(3163)
(41131)
(43155)
(38107)
(6293)
(6293)
(6293)
(3654)
(5075)
(6698)
(5885)
(2949)
(2949)
(4374)
(4474)
(4475)
(4372)
(4371)
(5160)
(7394)
(105151)
(108157)

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV

YEAR

American Samoa

19

Australia

Brunei
Darussalam

57

59

Cambodia

68

286

China

33

68

China, Hong Kong


SAR

112

70

China, Macao
SAR

95

68

Cook Islands

Fiji

31

22

French Polynesia

30

15

Guam

56

Japan

42

18

Kiribati

95

287

Lao People's
Democratic
Republic

44

64

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
9
3
6
3
4
4
1 016
1 073
1 043
1 046
1 213
1 217
1 187
143

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

17
16
31
41
41

27
12
20
24

17
43
43
61
65

2
77
70

8
6
13

15
5
12
0
5

0
0
0
0

15
5
12
0
5

0
0
0
0

0
0
0

605
814
718
542
432
466

588
893
997
1 168

605
814
1 306
1 435
1 429
1 634

0
0
0

42 845
35 546
34 169
6 325

2 863
0
0

18 693
19 664
49 707
43 701
42 537
39 307

53 480
90 780
58 378
17 046
14 909

18 693
73 144
140 487
102 079
59 583
54 216

5 301
0
0
0

3 115
3 179
2 981
2 673
2 352

772
701
728
722
792

0
0
0
0

188
219
376
321
316

594
500
185
188
197

782
719
561
509
513

0
0
0
0

141
160
136
139
116
123
0
2
0
1
2
1
0
84
68
62
63
78
83
89

94
180
162
150
130
175
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
105
99
42
29
5
21
45

70
50
43
49
45
49
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
37
34
40
40
19
38
45

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

49
12
14
21
17
21
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

17
17
28
39
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

49
12
31
38
45
60
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

2
0

0
0

2
0

0
0
0

4
2
10

0
0
2

4
2
12

0
0
0

62
63
50
53
41

29
21
20
17
13

19
25
18
17
18

10
14
10
14
6

0
0
0

1
3
2
5
4

0
0
0
0

1
3
2
5
4

0
0
0
0

54
63
89
102
101
51 821
43 078
39 384
27 194
24 181
23 631
22 693
68

43
27
31
31
39

5
26
50
60
51

6
9
8
10
9

0
0
0
0

1
1
0
1
2

1
1
0
0

1
2
1
1
2

0
0
0
0

14 367
11 853
10 931
8 995
8 853
8 237

25 172
19 118
10 056
8 856
8 591
8 630

2 803
7 046
5 340
5 073
4 975
4 632

736
1 367
867
1 257
1 212
1 194

1 125
579
539
568

736
1 367
1 992
1 836
1 751
1 762

54
124
147
145
118

47
79
71
70
91

106
126
107
59
71

0
0
0

3
3
10
4
6

7
7
0
8

3
10
17
4
14

0
0
0

478
1 526
2 801
3 075
3 034
3 119

404
457
484
519
368
394

95
180
275
298
292
323

2
64
139
153
154
163

41
26
30
22

2
64
180
179
184
185

67
78
52
62

252
332
335
278
286
1 826
830
2 227
3 699
4 045
3 848
3 999

0
2
3
2
3

1
0
0
2
1

0
0
0
0

0
1
0
0
0

251
241
299
267
274

362
339
409
391
410

369
450
473
511
457

1
7
5

84
101
132
140
146

166
30
28
18
30

42
27
43
49
43

11 101
14 822
21 001
19 860
17 863
17 454

1 465
1 108
7 057
7 847
8 378
8 301

1 428
2 147
6 759
10 678
12 529
14 239

134 488
204 765
472 719
462 596
449 152
429 899

203 088
229 943
329 157
431 115
439 399
432 868

0
1 940
1 561
1 459
1 444
1 475

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

0
1
0
0
0

307
163
223
213
237
6 501
14 603
18 891
35 535
38 927
39 202
40 460
375 481
515 764
454 372
894 428
975 821
965 257
908 399
6 510
6 212
6 015
5 660
5 544
5 160
4 935
343
402
449
355
359
308
368
0
2
1
1
2
2
0
226
203
144
132
106
144
189
59

2
3
0
0
0

OTHER RELAPSE

1 560

0
0

43
35
35
26
0
0
0
0
0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

100
60
0
0
0

41
42
42
41
40

34
77
83
89
83

88
93
75
72
68
68

40
47
59
52
51
50

38
33
33
35
39

60
47
46
48
47
41

100
0
100
100
50

44
41
60
68
94
80
66

60
46
53
50
42

90
51
38
34
43

36
38
52
50
51
49

53
61
67
67
56

54
77
85
86
89
89

Western Pacic Region

NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

233

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV
NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

YEAR

Malaysia

64

65

Marshall Islands

352

Micronesia
(Federated
States of)

381

144

Mongolia

76

162

Nauru

76

29

New Caledonia

84

20

New Zealand

10

Niue

Northern Mariana
Islands

64

53

Palau

93

Papua New
Guinea

60

212

Philippines

514

178

Republic of Korea

149

87

Samoa

27

234

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
11 702
11 778
15 057
15 342
17 144
17 341
18 517

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

0
0
0
0

9
28
30
12
65

0
0
0

79
69
35
89
47
79

18
4
19
30
38
25

1 330
732
897
640
726
701

976
862
1 620
1 745
1 683
1 675

4
0
2
1
1

0
11
2
1
1

0
0
2
1

21
20
16
9
15
20

81
15
15
22
26
16

9
29
15
10
13
13

0
0
0

78
74
83
101
90
86

222
133
114
91
90
68

34
130
95
92
102
134

29
2
11
6

0
0
0
0
0
0

1
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

14
27
15
13
16
17

26
37
35
12
16
13

8
11
7
3
6
2

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
2
0
0

0
0
0
2
0
0

0
0
0
0

19

10

19
19
2 497
8 041
10 520
12 564
13 984
12 306
14 531
317 008
119 186
119 914
137 100
139 603
146 565
166 323
63 904
42 117
21 782
38 290
36 847
38 741
41 889
44
45
43
24
12
16
14

6
9

9
10

4
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

1 652
1 933
1 805
2 323
2 238
2 584

3 767
4 405
5 105
5 340
4 768
5 907

2 349
3 227
4 198
4 522
4 826
5 798

914
1 582

273
955
1 456
1 799
1 388
1 824

94 768
67 056
81 647
85 025
88 806
89 198

140 712
52 858
50 347
49 916
52 041
72 440

1 149
2 085
2 745
1 610

0
0
0
0

3 957
2 577
2 973
3 075

6 289
6 602
8 066

3 957
8 866
9 575
11 141

0
0
0

11 754
8 216
11 638
11 048
11 285
11 596

19 360
11 304
18 460
17 292
17 634
18 660

5 171
5 813
6 923
8 795

0
0
0
0

2 082
2 262
3 021
2 694
2 899
2 838

4 077
3 616
3 981
4 038

2 082
2 262
7 098
6 310
6 880
6 876

4 602
3 707
4 577
2 174

15
13
11
6
8
6

30
18
8
5
5
5

6
12
5
1
3
3

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

4
11
5
4
3
143
87
94
47
44
54
49
348
391
344
332
292
298
301
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
28
48
75
57
28
38
32

4 021
5 517
4 862
3 814
4 596
4 338

1 069
1 384
1 702
2 197
2 344
2 545

11
48
28
52
59

25
31
62
71
64

9
15
32
38
61
53
0
455
1 389
1 868
1 838
1 809
1 837

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

210
0
332
692
420
499

34
111
125
135
190
367
172
91
98
164
148
160
1 659
2 780
3 109
4 601
4 490
4 481
4 458
7

6 688
8 156
8 446
10 441
9 981
11 135

OTHER RELAPSE

651
362
761
820

210
0
983
1 054
1 181
1 319

73
0
0
0

0
4
5
0
2

1
2
2
8

0
5
7
2
10

0
0
6
3

5
4
0
0

2
3
7
3
2
3

14
2
7
10

2
3
21
5
9
13

0
0
4

0
0
0
0

82
126
216
267
263
245

125
277
306
343

82
126
341
544
569
588

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

1
0
0
4
4
1
3
0

4
7
11
6
5
7

0
2
0
0

3
0
0

0
0
0

6
1
9
8

4
4
7
4
9
8

0
6
0
0

0
8
5
4
4

4
7
19
11
9
11

0
0

273
955
1 456
1 799
474
242

0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

62
60
63
73
68
72

31
61
31
42
48

10
18
48
30
56
40

25
65
68
74
71
72

100
0
50
50
50

21
57
52
29
37
56

26
36
42
53
50
56

35
42
30
52
50
57

60

33

40
47

30
30
26
30
32
30

40
56
62
63
63
55

38
42
39
39
39
38

33
42
58
55
62
55

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($&DVHQRWLILFDWLRQV
NEW CASES

NEW AND RELAPSE


NOTIFICATION RATEa
19902010

YEAR

Singapore

53

31

Solomon Islands

123

63

Tokelau

62

Tonga

24

11

Tuvalu

255

142

Vanuatu

95

48

Viet Nam

75

108

Wallis and Futuna


Islands

66

SMEAR- SMEAR-NEGATIVE/
POSITIVE
UNKNOWN

EXTRAPULMONARY

455
248
552
525
552
530

1 187
869
570
672
655
735

127
165
174
240
235
213

109
109
169
140
138
133

133
128
161
136
86
98

1
0
0
0
0
0

OTHER RELAPSE

0
0
0
0

120
55
60
111
83
82

97
65
62
97
140
105

0
0
0
0

1
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

9
15
11
11
6
6

2
5
3
0
1
3

9
3
4
2
1
2

6
0
5
9
8
5

13
7
3
5
0
2

16
7
4
3
10
7

30
63
35
45
47
44

27
56
21
19
24
33

37 550
53 169
55 492
53 484
51 291
52 145

RE-TREAT EXCL. TOTAL


HISTORY
RELAPSE
RETREAT UNKNOWN

93
40
49
48

120
55
153
151
132
130

20
13
0
0

13
0
5
14
2
2

0
0
0
3

13
0
5
14
2
5

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
1
0
0
0

0
0
0

0
1
0
0
0

0
0
0

1
3
2
0
0

3
2
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
1 825
2 581

0
0
0

0
0
0

21
28
17
39
62
35

0
0
0
3

1
5
3
0
1
1

5
1
2
0

1
5
8
1
3
1

8 379
17 993
16 429
19 056
18 612
18 237

6 194
13 137
16 670
18 610
18 333
17 651

0
0
0
0

3 616
5 493
6 325
6 622
6 800
6 834

976
912
1 331
1 574

3 616
5 493
7 301
7 534
8 131
8 408

9
9

0
0
0

% SMEARPOS AMONG
NEW PULM

28
22
49
44
46
42

45
46
51
51
62
58

50

82
75
79
100
86
67

32
0
63
64
100
71

53
53
63
70
66
57

82
75
77
74
73
74

60

14

22

Western Pacic Region

1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010
1990
1995
2000
2005
2008
2009
2010

NEW AND
RELAPSEa
1 591
1 889
1 728
1 356
1 548
1 525
1 560
382
352
302
397
387
366
338
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
23
20
24
18
13
8
11
23
36
16
12
17
18
14
140
79
152
76
103
134
116
50 203
55 739
89 792
94 916
97 772
95 036
94 867

Rates are per 100 000 population. Where notification data from a country had not been received by 2 September, the notification rate was assumed to be the same as for 2009 (in italics ).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

235

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

American Samoa

100

100

Australia

80

Brunei
Darussalam

71

91

95

Cambodia

China

93

95

China, Hong Kong


SAR

70

China, Macao
SAR

88

Cook Islands

100

Fiji

86

94

French Polynesia

67

89

Guam

96

Japan

52

Kiribati

87

97

70

93

69

78

Lao People's
Democratic
Republic

Malaysia

Marshall Islands

25

84

80

88

74

88

Micronesia
(Federated
States of)

Mongolia

236

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

2
3
0
0
0

4
2
4
0
0
3

251
241
281
299
267

238
241
498
587
606

84
101
136
132
140
11 101
14 822
21 001
19 421
19 860
17 863
134 488
204 765
472 719
465 877
462 596
449 152
0
1 940
1 561
1 501
1 459
1 444
141
160
136
138
139
116
2
0
1

84
101
136
164
164
4 363
14 775
21 001
19 429
19 811
17 863
131 413
213 766
472 719
465 877
464 151
449 039
1 940
1 561
1 481
1 448
1 441
160
136
251
246
115
2
1
2
2
0
73
62
68
78
82
79
33
62
18
26
28
18

2
1
68
62
63
52
78
83
29
21
19
20
17
43
27
5
31
31
14 367
11 853
10 931
9 433
8 995
8 853
54
124
103
147
145
478
1 526
2 801
3 080
3 075
3 034
6 688
8 156
8 446
9 578
10 441
9 981
11
48
19
28
52
9
15
32
47
38
61
455
1 389
1 868
1 856
1 838
1 809

43
27
36
31
47
10 348
10 931
9 421
8 999
8 772
31
54
123
100
146
144
343
1 588
2 802
3 080
3 075
3 034
13 398
7 915
8 446
10 236
9 757
9 981
163
11
47
27
35
58
10
14
20
52
59
60
455
1 389
1 868
1 855
1 838
1 809

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100
133

95
100
177
196
227

100
100
100
124
117
39
100
100
100
100
100
98
104
100
100
100
100

100
100
99
99
100

100
100
182
177
99
100

100

100
0
107
100
108
150
105
95

214
86
137
140
106

100
100
720
100
152

87
100
100
100
99

100
99
97
99
99
72
104
100
100
100
100
200
97
100
107
93
100

100
98
142
125
112
111
93
63
111
155
98
100
100
100
100
100
100

COMPLETED

100
0
75

0
100

0
0

0
0

0
0

100

0
0
25

27
12
7
7
6

45
68
77
73
73

9
10
6
6
3

0
0
1
0

3
2
2
1
1

16
8
7
12
16

42
66
63
64
63
83
88
89
91
92
92
72
93
92
93
92
93

21
5
13
23
8
8
4
4
3
3
3
22
2
2
2
2

17
7
4
8
9
2
4
3
3
2
2
2
1
2
1
1
1

0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
2
1
1
1
1

4
2
2
1
0
4
4
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1

17
20
18
4
20
2
1
2
2
2
1
3
3
3
3
3
2

55
60
59
58
59

5
3
7
10
11

5
5
11
17
15

6
9
14
0
0

4
3
6
4
3

24
20
3
11
12

81
93
49
89
86
100

8
0
42
0
2
0

6
4
6
5
3
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

4
1
1
1
2
0

1
3
2
4
7
0

100

0
100
0

8
5
0

0
0
0

96
89

7
5
10
5
6
4
3
2
11
12
4
6

0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0

50

3
8
10
10
1
1
21
0
0
4
0
6

0
0
0

4
2
9
4
2
1
9
0
0
0
0
0

93
85
89
90
96

0
0
0
0
0

7
11
6
6
2

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
4
6
3
2

30
38
17
18
21
45
83
62
79
93
84
62
68
85
91
92
91
69
0
69
67
78
78
3
64
85
93
91
71
80
93
75
25
39
65
66
83
82
85
84
84

15
22
29
30
31
42
7
31
14
3
13
8
9
5
2
1
2
0
78
1
5
1
1
21
27
2
4
6
14
0
0
5
40
8
23
7
4
6
4
3
4

5
11
18
19
19
13
7
7
7
4
3
6
7
5
6
5
4
6
8
9
8
8
9
7
0
2
0
0
9
10
7
10
8
2
3
8
3
3
2
3
2

4
3
1
1
1

1
1
5
4
4

2
0
0
0
0
2
0
1
0
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
1
0
0
0
19
9
3
1
1
2
8
10
5
5
4
4
67
9
2
4
3
3
10
0
0
4
2
0
10
4
3
2
2
2

44
26
30
28
24
0
0
0
0
0
0
4
7
1
0
0
1
14
4
16
15
11
9
1
0
9
0
0
3
0
0
5
21
49
7
2
3
2
0
1
0

50

78
81
71
81
82
89
67
0

9
5
0
97
89

85

DIED

FAILED

0
0
0
0
0
5
2
0
2
6
3
5
6
7
7

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

CURED

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVQHZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Nauru

New Caledonia

75

93

New Zealand

76

Niue

Northern Mariana
Islands

81

Palau

67

75

Papua New
Guinea

56

72

60

89

76

83

80

90

86

82

Philippines

Republic of Korea

Samoa

Singapore

Solomon Islands

65

88

Tokelau

Tonga

75

83

Tuvalu

88

85

96

89

92

Vanuatu

Viet Nam

Wallis and Futuna


Islands

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

4
0
3
2
1
21
20
16
12
9
15
78
74
83
81
101
90
0
0
0
0
0
0
14
27
15
14
13
16
9
3
5
6
1 652
1 933
1 805
2 087
2 323
2 238
94 768
67 056
81 647
86 566
85 025
88 806
11 754
8 216
11 638
10 927
11 048
11 285
15
13
11
6
8
455
248
552
504
525
552
109
109
169
142
140
138
1
0
0
0
0
0
9
15
11
14
11
6
6
0
5
12
9
8
30
63
35
41
45
47
37 550
53 169
55 492
54 457
53 484
51 291
3

SIZE OF
COHORT

4
3
2
3
0
32
45
16
13
11
15
73
84
84
98
92

0
0
0

27
15
13
13
16
9
3
0
8
4 904
422
1 292
2 087
2 259
2 584
90 297
50 196
81 125
86 566
85 025
88 806
11 675
3 231
3 752
3 987
4 056
3 813
15
13
11
13
7
10
122
242
548
859
951
937
368
109
169
142
140
138

0
20
15
11
14
11
6
7
6
16
9
8
13
26
42
42
43
47
38 189
53 169
55 492
54 457
53 482
51 387

1
1
3
2

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100

67
150
0
152
225
100
108
122
100

99
101
104
97
102

100
100
93
100
100
100

100

133
297
22
72
100
97
115
95
75
99
100
100
100
99
39
32
36
37
34
100
100
100

117
125
27
98
99
170
181
170
338
100
100
100
100
100

222
100
100
100
100
100

120
133
100
100
43
41
120
102
96
100
102
100
100
100
100
100

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

25
0
0
33

67
100
67

33
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

75
0
0
0

75
33
88
69
9
0

56
6
8
73
93

13
9
6
23
9
0

0
0
9
0

3
2
0
0
0
7

9
0
0
0
0
0

5
0
0
0

25
60
86
73
76

23
6
7
8
7

0
0
0

1
1
3
1

47
33
6
15
16

81
73
0
0
56

0
0
92
77
81
11

0
0
0
8
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
11

19
27
8
15
19
22

100

63

73
56
75
82
67

13
56
24
14
6
7
13
6
15
7
10
8
7
2
2
2
1
2
2
67
8
0
8
0
0
15
71
83
19
19
17
65
7
30
17
11
22

25
4
2
4
1
4
4
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
20
8
9
0
29
10
2
14
14
16
16
15
6
5
8
6
2
4

0
0
0
1
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
8
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1

0
15
26
19
6
16
16
5
6
4
4
4
4
5
3
4
4
3
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
11
14
2
1
0
1
4
4
4
1
1
3

0
25
9
5
51
13
6
34
3
3
3
5
4
14
12
11
12
12
12
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
2
2
26
11
2
1
3
3

75
93
73
93
100
83

0
0
0
0
0
0

10
0
18
7
0
17

5
7
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

10
0
9
0
0
0

100
56
67
88
38
77
64
81
63
81
84
90
90
89
90
90

86
0
19
11
0
46
12
17
12
28
15
5
2
2
2
2
2

0
13
11
0
15
8
10
2
5
4
3
3
3
3
3
3

0
0
0
0
0
0
7
0
2
0
2
1
1
1
1
1

14
0
6
11
0
0
4
2
0
2
0
4
2
1
2
2
2

0
0
6
0
13
0
0
0
5
0
0
2
2
2
2
2
2

100

39
57
33
58
58
54
73
82
79
80
82
74
81
81
81
82
81
13
85
91
85
71
90
71

62
62
65

Western Pacic Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

237

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a
19952009

YEAR

American Samoa

Australia

66

Brunei
Darussalam

Cambodia

85

79

92

90

China

China, Hong Kong


SAR

65

China, Macao
SAR

78

Cook Islands

Fiji

80

French Polynesia

50

100

Guam

100

Japan

48

Kiribati

100

Lao People's
Democratic
Republic

100

89

Malaysia

61

Marshall Islands

88

100

19

61

73

Micronesia
(Federated
States of)

Mongolia

238

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

0
1
0
0
0

1
0
0
0

17
43
47
43
61

11
43
55
50
65

15
5
12
12
0
605
814
1 306
1 542
1 435
1 429
18 693
73 144
140 487
112 816
102 079
59 583

5
12
12
0
436
827
1 306
711
597
1 429
54 052
43 252
89 239
70 163
64 023
59 853

782
719
572
561
509
49
12
31
46
38
45
0
0
0

218
716
555
526
481

0
0
2
0

0
0

37
37
46
38
46

0
1
4
2

0
5
2

1
3
2
2
5
1
2
2
1
1
736
1 367
1 992
1 685
1 836
1 751

4
4
4
5

2
1
0
1
1 169
1 992
1 423
1 547
1 452

3
10
24
17
4
2
64
180
149
179
184
210
0
983
1 147
1 054
1 181

9
3
5
17
6
1
64
181
149
153
184

1 056
1 362
1 171
1 181

0
5
11
7
2
2
3
21
5
5
9
82
126
341
609
544
569

20
16
2
8
9
20
9
8
5
16
23
126
443
609
385
380

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100

65
100
117
116
107

100
100
100

72
102
100
46
42
100
289
59
64
62
63
100

28
100
97
94
94

308
119
100
100
102

0
250

133
200
200
100

100
50
0
100

86
100
84
84
83

300
30
21
100
150
50
100
101
100
85
100

107
119
111
100

400
145
29
400
450
667
43
160
100
178
28
100
130
100
71
67

CURED

COMPLETED

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

100

9
16
7
4
6

73
56
69
62
60

9
5
5
12
3

0
0
0
2

0
5
4
2
8

9
19
15
20
22

40
75
50

59
85
49
77
74
34
90
86
85
84
85
86

40
25
33

26
5
27
6
5
45
2
2
5
5
4
4

20
0
8

5
6
9
6
7
3
2
1
3
2
2
2

0
0
0

3
1
2
4
5
1
3
1
3
2
2
2

0
0
0

3
4
3
2
3
1
1
1
1
1
1
1

0
0
8

4
0
11
5
6
15
1
8
4
5
5
4

27
40
0
21
26

26
18
61
45
38

4
4
6
13
15

17
9
8
0
0

18
7
5
5
6

8
22
19
16
14

68
51
37
55
43

16
24
35
26
35

11
11
13
3
11

0
0
0
0
0

5
0
0
3
7

0
14
15
13
4

40
50

40
0

20
50

0
0

0
0

0
0

75
75
100

25
50
0
0

0
0
0

0
25
0

0
0
0
0

50
100

100

50

0
0

31
29
14
14
15

15
16
24
30
32

5
8
13
16
15

6
2
1
1
1

1
2
9
8
6

41
43
39
31
31

89
100
100
53
83
100
41
75
83
86
85

11

0
24
17
0
8
12
3
3
3

0
12
0
0
11
6
7
9
8

0
0
0
0
8
2
5
1
2

0
12
0
0
11
5
3
0
1

0
0
0
0
0
0
22
1
0
1
0

46
23
36
33

9
18
26
27

8
7
11
9

1
2
1
1

9
27
5
6

27
22
22
23

60
13
0
13
100
25
11
0
40
0
61
57
39
43
51
60

10
63
50
75
0
60
89
25
20
19
0
14
34
33
22
13

13
50
0
0
5

0
0
0
0
10

13
0
13
0
0

75
20
75
9
8
9
6
6
4

0
0
0
13
8
11
12
16
17

0
0
0
13
7
4
5
4
4

50
0

30
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
20
6
4
6
3
1
1
2

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7UHDWPHQWRXWFRPHVUHWUHDWPHQWFDVHV
% OF COHORT
YEAR

Nauru

100

New Caledonia

100

89

New Zealand

67

Niue

Northern Mariana
Islands

Palau

Papua New
Guinea

58

Philippines

61

40

71

Republic of Korea

Samoa

Singapore

76

Solomon Islands

100

Tokelau

Tonga

100

Tuvalu

Vanuatu

100

Viet Nam

81

73

Wallis and Futuna


Islands

1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009
1995
2000
2005
2007
2008
2009

NUMBER
NOTIFIED

SIZE OF
COHORT

0
1
3
0
4
4
7
4
4
9
4
7
19
17
11
9
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
273
955
1 456
1 277
1 799
1 388
8
3 957
5 075
8 866
9 575
2 082
2 262
7 098
6 583
6 310
6 880
0
0
0
0
0
120
55
153
149
151
132
13
0
5
9
14
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
3
1
2
0
1
5
8
0
1
3
3 616
5 493
7 301
7 658
7 534
8 131
1

0
1
0
1
4
7
2
5
9
23
18
17
11
9

0
0
0

0
2
0
0

0
0
0
68
65

530

4 101
3 819
4 362
2 004
131
3 331
2 698
2 476
2 420

0
1
0
0

149
116
149
130

5
9
14
2

0
9
1
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
5
0
0
1
3
2 384
8 806
7 374
7 659
7 534
357

0
0
0

COHORT AS
% NOTIFIED

100
0

100

100
50
125
100

329
95
100
100
100

7
4

38

81
43
46
96
6
47
41
39
35

97
78
99
98

100
100
100
100

100

0
0
0

100
0

100
100
66
160
101
100
100
4

DIED

FAILED

DEFAULTED

NOT
EVALUATED

CURED

COMPLETED

100
100

100

0
0

86
100
0
0

0
0
40
89

14
0
40
0

0
0
20
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
11

0
0
0
0

30
67
65
91
67

4
0
24
0
11

0
0
0

0
0
0

65
33
12
9
22

100

29
42

35
14

4
15

1
6

21
20

9
3

36

22

29

53
56
48
39
59
72
70
74
69

18
15
13
1
2
3
2
2
3

4
4
4
1
3
2
1
1
2

6
4
4
2
3
0
1
1
1

7
7
5
3
12
6
6
6
5

11
14
26
53
21
18
20
16
21

100

71
40
37

79
11
30
39

15
15
22
20

0
1
0
0

5
3
3
1

1
0
5
3

20
78
79
50

40
22
21
50

20
0
0
0

20
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

100
100

0
0

100

0
100
80
74
79
79
80
67

0
0
2
5
4
3
3
6

100
0
5
6
5
6
5
8

0
0
8
5
6
5
5
2

0
0
2
3
3
4
3
10

0
0
4
7
3
3
3
7

Western Pacic Region

TREATMENT SUCCESS (%)a


19952009

TREATMENT SUCCESS = percent cured + percent completed then rounded to the nearest digit.

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

239

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

YEAR

American Samoa

100

42

44

100

100

Australia

Brunei
Darussalam

Cambodia

77

16

68

74

91

94

China

China, Hong Kong


SAR

China, Macao
SAR

Cook Islands

Fiji

100

82

48

24

72

61

52

13

54

38

73

91

77

68

50

89

40

41

58

French Polynesia

Guam

Japan

Kiribati

Lao People's
Democratic
Republic
Malaysia

Marshall Islands

Micronesia
(Federated
States of)
Mongolia

Nauru

New Caledonia

New Zealand

Niue

Northern Mariana
Islands
98

100

90

100

Palau

Papua New
Guinea

240

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS
0
100
100
100
42
36
49
44
100
100
100
100
3
54
70
77

8
6
16
68
72
74
74
91
91
90
94
0
0
0

100
98
48
82
48
32
23
24
72
66
63
61

56
51
52
13
5
54
54

13
17
38
73
88
84
91
77
100
69
68
6
39
46
50
0
27
83
89
0
0
0
0
40

0
41
46
46
58

98
117
87
100
90

100
100

4
7
7

0
3
4
4
448
440
648
564
163
223
213
237
1 044
21 523
28 264
32 236
81 682
63 227
145 919
4 209
4 121
3 953
3 805
378
376
335
407
0
0
0
0
132
104
69
157
30
16
12
10
46
59
64
62
13 777
12 429
12 098
44
16
151
159
557
686
1 537
11 661
15 337
15 192
17 577
86
127
98
137
7
64
72
87
1
1 296
3 993
4 256
0
0
0
0
21

0
140
136
140
178
0
0
0
56
35
33
32
9
18
19
19
582
888
1 112

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)
6
3
4
4
1 073
1 227
1 314
1 281
163
223
213
237
36 123
39 820
40 199
41 628
990 509
1 034 199
982 303
923 308
6 160
5 729
5 348
5 132
415
411
371
433
1
2
2
0
132
106
144
191
63
50
53
41
64
90
102
101
28 319
24 760
24 170
23 261
339
342
278
294
3 807
4 149
3 930
4 083
16 066
17 506
18 102
19 337
112
127
143
201
112
166
155
174
4 726
4 767
4 787
4 801
11
7
4
3
53
51
63
57
340
297
302
305
0
0
0
0
57
30
38
32
10
19
19
12 564
13 984
13 220
16 113

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE

0
0
0
22
17
23
28
2
0
2
1
86
3 309
3 597
2 112
2 848
2 511
4 542
35
48
38
28
1
1
1
3
0
0
0
0
1
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
1
67
52
53
2
0
2
0
221
179
181
1 468
1 819
1 644
1 628
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
2
0
0
0
0
0

0
8
8
3
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

91
130

0
0
0
5
4
4
5
1
0
1
0
8
15
13
7

3
4
3
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1

0
2
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
2

0
0
0
5
0
1
0

40
26
12
13
12
11
9
0
0
2
0

0
0
0
100
0
0
0

6
6
2
1

0
0
0
0
0

0
0

10
12

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

9
12

100
100

39
30
65

54
87

49
35
29
14
0
0
0
0

100

50

100

100

98
89
83

10
22

100
100

100

59

100
100

22
15
45

20
43
45
54
33
26
25
100
100
0
0

100

50

59

43
10
22

100

100
100

100

0
0

0
2
66
66
491

75
78

0
1

0
0

0
0
0
0

1
0

0
2
0

0
0

0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0

47
135

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($+,9WHVWLQJDQGSURYLVLRQRI&37$57DQG,37 

% OF TB PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV STATUS
20052010

YEAR

Philippines

Republic of Korea

Samoa

50

74

11

Singapore

Solomon Islands

Tokelau

73

15

43

Tonga

Tuvalu

Vanuatu

Viet Nam

Wallis and Futuna


Islands

1
1
1

8
0
13
50

71
74
0
0
0
11

100
100
73

89
0
0
0
16
8
0
15
11
36
43

100

1 069
1 136
1 356

2
0
2
7

1 121
1 187
0
0
0
39
0
0
0
13
8
8
17
0
0
0
17
11
0
14 128
11 332
34 907
42 356
4
9

PATIENTS
NOTIFIED
(NEW AND
RETREAT)

NUMBER OF HIV- % OF TESTED


POSITIVE TB
TB PATIENTS
PATIENTS
HIV-POSITIVE

137 100
145 892
153 167
174 389
46 969
44 170
47 299
48 101
24
12
16
14
1 469
1 601
1 574
1 608
397
387
366
341
0
0
0
0
18
13
8
11
15
19
18
14
81
104
136
116
95 892
98 684
98 192
99 022
7

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
595
2 210
5 934
3 515
0

0
1
0

96
138
0
0
0
0

52
53
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0

5
4

0
0
0

0
0

4
20
17
8

% OF HIV% OF HIVNUMBER OF HIVPOSITIVE


POSITIVE TB POSITIVE TB
PEOPLE
PATIENTS ON PATIENTS ON
PROVIDED IPT
CPT
ART

78
89
62

32
6
43

1
16

0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0

500
1 500
1 317

Western Pacic Region

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

% OF TB
NUMBER OF TB
PATIENTS WITH PATIENTS WITH
KNOWN HIV
KNOWN HIV
STATUS
STATUS

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

241

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

YEAR
American Samoa

Australia

Brunei
Darussalam

Cambodia

China

China, Hong Kong


SAR

China, Macao
SAR

Cook Islands

Fiji

French Polynesia

Guam

Japan

Kiribati

Lao People's
Democratic
Republic
Malaysia

Marshall Islands

Micronesia
(Federated
States of)
Mongolia

Nauru

New Caledonia

New Zealand

Niue

Northern Mariana
Islands

Palau

Papua New
Guinea

242

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa

0
0
12
21
31
33

0
0
31
2
31

474
2 792
41
18
21
28
9
7
3
6

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
2

68
1

2
1
56
55
64
2
1
1
1
4
3
1
0
115
168
187

0
0
0
4
0
7
4

0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
5

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED
5
3
4
4
1 030
1 182
1 176
1 146
158
211
213
232
34 817
38 385
38 770
39 994
844 721
932 120
922 720
869 092
5 441
5 168
4 839
4 619
341
338
291
347
1
2
2
0
132
102
142
179
60
48
48
37
62
89
101
99
26 327
22 924
22 419
21 499
329
325
274
280
3 560
3 892
3 694
3 836
15 010
16 452
16 921
18 018
107
120
135
188
91
161
146
157
4 385
4 223
4 218
4 213
11
4
4
3
46
41
54
49
321
286
293
294
0
0
0
0
57
28
38
32
10
19
19
11 108
12 185
11 832
14 289

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

0
0

868

164
181
11
5

3 271
2 443
2 056
1 897
265
243
201
221

0
0

0
4
46
42
27
39
37
50
56

7 684
1

15 010

52
40
68
35
40
48
50
0
75
121
40

41
43
20
247
231
237

24
21
17
3

11

0
0

76

77
78

60
47
42
41
78
72
69
64

0
2

96
88
73
63
42
50
57

36
0

100

49

30
36
38
25
33
32
0
2
3
1

100
80
41
77
81
81

42

55
53
30

58

0
0

21

0
0
3
1

12
229
28
8
15
18
6
5
3
4

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
2

41

2
1
1
0
4
3
1
0
1
3
18

0
0
0
1
0
6

NOTIFIED
1
0
0
0
43
43
61
65
5
12
0
5
1 306
1 435
1 429
1 634
140 487
102 079
59 583
54 216
719
561
509
513
31
38
45
60
0
0
0
0
4
2
12
3
2
5
4
2
1
1
2
1 992
1 836
1 751
1 762
10
17
4
14
180
179
184
185
983
1 054
1 181
1 319
5
7
2
10
21
5
9
13
341
544
569
588
3
0
0
7
4
9
8
19
11
9
11

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

0
0

48

13
5
91
93

163
310
234
211
19
25
27
39

0
0

2
4
3
2
4
4
0
0
1
2

694

1 056

3
1
3
21
3
2
3
16
334
508
561

4
1
0
14
6
8

2
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
1 456
1 799
1 388
1 824

1
0
0
0

74

100

23
55
46
41
61
66
60
65

100
33
100
100
80
100
0
0
100
100

39

107

60

50
30
100
60
22
23
5
61
89
95

100
11
0
74
55
89

0
0

11

0
0
28
30

367
1 669
13
10
6
10
3
2
0
2

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

27

0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
114
165
169

0
0
0
3
0
1

0
0
0
0
0
0

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($7HVWLQJIRU0'57%DQGQXPEHURIFRQILUPHGFDVHVRI0'57%

YEAR
Philippines

Republic of Korea

Samoa

Singapore

Solomon Islands

Tokelau

Tonga

Tuvalu

Vanuatu

Viet Nam

274
929
1 073
522

450

0
3
4
3
3

0
0

0
0

0
0

217
101

NEW CASES

NOTIFIED
133 143
137 026
143 592
163 248
35 269
34 153
35 842
39 051
24
12
16
14
1 296
1 437
1 442
1 478
392
373
364
336
0
0
0
0
18
13
8
11
12
17
18
14
73
103
133
115
88 591
91 150
88 236
88 033
7

PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES

NUMBER OF
% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
NOTIFIED TESTED TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
FOR MDR-TB
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB
4
74
1 242
3

0
895
919
915
923

5
1

0
0

0
0
1
0

0
69
64
63
62

1
0

0
0

4
14
1 050
2

103

0
2
1
3
2

0
0

0
0

NOTIFIED
3 957
8 866
9 575
11 141
7 098
6 310
6 880
6 876
0
0
0
0
153
151
132
130
5
14
2
5
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
2
0
0
8
1
3
1
7 301
7 534
8 131
8 408

NUMBER OF NOTIFIED
TESTED FOR MDR-TB

% OF NOTIFIED
NUMBER OF
TESTED FOR CONFIRMED CASES
MDR-TB
OF MDR-TB

138
1 305
36
297

0
105
103
85
79

15
1

0
0

3
15
0
3

69
68
64
61

750
20

119
729
23
232

347

0
1
3
0
1

0
0

0
0

Western Pacic Region

Wallis and Futuna


Islands

2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010
2005
2008
2009
2010

TOTAL
CONFIRMED
CASES OF
MDR-TBa

TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES OF MDR-TB includes cases with unknown previous treatment history (i.e. not included under NEW CASES or PREVIOUSLY TREATED CASES).

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

243

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[
MALE
YEAR

American Samoa

Australia

Brunei
Darussalam

Cambodia

China

China, Hong Kong


SAR

China, Macao
SAR

Cook Islands

Fiji

French Polynesia

Guam

Japan

Kiribati

Lao People's
Democratic
Republic
Malaysia

Marshall Islands

Micronesia
(Federated
States of)
Mongolia

Nauru

New Caledonia

New Zealand

Niue

Northern Mariana
Islands

Palau

Papua New
Guinea

Philippines

244

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

014

1524

2534

3544

FEMALE
4554

5564

65+

3
0
2

16
32
42

35
27
33

25
23
22

24
11
25

19
12
9

49
30
27

0
0
0
161
26
49
39
1 102
1 131
1 416
759

6
9
17
453
519
894
750
12 791
19 111
43 005
42 851

4
19
15
1 244
1 323
1 600
1 564
18 306
29 399
49 558
38 880

15
19
13
1 147
1 618
2 349
1 760
15 487
25 206
55 400
50 246

5
12
18
1 253
1 456
2 043
2 105
13 105
25 593
54 872
52 925

7
9
7
1 257
1 373
1 964
1 531
13 489
21 429
53 822
56 754

15
0
18
707
1 058
1 811
1 599
10 130
21 771
69 779
64 514

4
3
2
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
7
1

78
76
52
7
10
6
17
0
0
1
0
8
8
9
7

102
84
84
19
8
9
5
0
0
0
0
10
6
18
15

160
108
99
20
25
21
7
0
0
0
0
9
13
18
11

211
200
184
13
22
23
22
0
0
0
0
4
5
14
6

236
168
166
12
9
17
20
1
0
0
0
2
4
16
2

578
453
413
16
17
22
11
0
0
0
0
3
2
6
4

1
0
0

3
2
3

3
2
1

4
2
0

4
0
1

4
4
1

3
2
1

2
0
0
15
2
9
1

1
2
2
342
246
197
128

6
4
3
627
572
488
252

6
4
5
995
676
605
382

9
2
5
1 847
1 494
868
469

6
2
7
2 059
1 509
1 418
911

9
4
3
4 089
3 816
3 867
3 326

2
3
3
6
7
13
8
59
32
244
129

9
15
27
56
92
136
157
640
694
1 179
884

3
15
13
71
128
223
254
879
1 138
2 218
1 438

3
12
10
68
166
296
287
775
1 177
2 277
1 599

3
17
9
78
201
373
416
788
908
1 980
1 453

8
4
6
90
177
300
385
374
814
1 427
967

2
1
2
55
176
352
380
1 072
891
1 507
981

3
2
0
0
0

5
4
10
1
2

4
4
1
0
0

1
5
4
3
1

3
6
6
1
0

5
1
6
0
0

3
1
2
0
1

3
37
6
7
3

8
99
181
271
285

1
111
260
253
255

2
68
171
232
231

4
19
68
147
154

4
13
38
52
50

0
15
23
36
40

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

0
2
1
2
1
4
6
6
6

0
3
3
1
2
3
5
10
13

0
4
4
0
3
3
6
6
4

0
2
2
0
1
5
8
6
6

0
2
3
3
4
7
10
5
5

0
3
4
0
3
7
7
10
11

1
1
0
0
0

1
4
0
2
2

3
8
1
0
3

5
9
3
0
0

10
9
4
3
2

3
3
1
3
1

2
2

1
1

8
28
37
2

87
183
279
43

70
205
260
56

30
108
196
61

21
94
135
46

12
48
87
47

5
12
27
26

482
511

7 358
9 320

11 275
12 224

13 253
13 716

12 531
13 651

7 646
8 923

4 279
4 742

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

65+

UNKNOWN

1
0

1
2
0

0
2
4

15
18
36

19
26
43

12
11
12

15
10
2

5
6
5

14
14
12

0
0
2
123
38
45
60
1 169
1 420
1 864
926

4
9
7
388
457
790
752
10 890
14 536
31 180
27 064

6
11
15
1 133
1 157
1 413
1 321
13 250
18 496
27 759
21 022

9
8
12
1 435
1 649
2 089
1 303
8 376
12 377
24 728
20 422

6
3
8
1 426
1 798
2 323
1 732
5 679
9 899
19 889
16 075

3
2
4
1 180
1 459
2 058
1 607
4 579
7 102
18 203
17 441

4
0
10
578
892
1 573
1 331
2 841
6 296
21 244
20 020

5
3
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
7
1

65
67
49
9
10
5
7
0
0
0
0
10
7
7
11

115
81
101
18
4
9
6
0
0
0
0
9
5
9
12

86
92
76
12
6
7
10
0
0
0
0
2
7
6
5

44
57
64
4
6
8
5
1
0
0
0
3
1
4
1

45
34
49
5
3
1
7
0
0
0
0
4
4
6
8

211
135
133
6
13
5
6
0
0
0
0
3
0
5
5

1
0
0

4
2
1

1
3
1

0
0
0

1
1
3

0
1
0

0
3
1

0
0
1
14
5
5
6

3
3
0
258
222
187
89

1
1
4
476
464
428
232

2
1
3
298
213
249
194

5
2
3
476
292
224
155

2
0
0
637
384
309
183

2
2
3
2 234
1 958
2 077
1 909

2
5
5
3
10
7
13
58
41
208
152

5
22
15
49
59
101
133
446
464
1 044
704

6
12
7
49
95
186
152
448
564
1 061
881

3
7
4
69
131
205
215
345
424
947
592

4
7
8
54
122
244
269
316
367
816
542

1
3
5
52
91
192
225
149
356
586
425

3
1
4
26
71
178
225
339
286
572
388

7
1
5
0
4

7
9
9
0
3

3
2
2
1
1

0
4
2
0
1

2
3
4
0
0

2
4
8
0
1

0
2
0
1
1

5
30
32
15
12

8
70
200
320
296

9
78
213
270
246

3
33
113
145
112

4
15
41
63
83

2
9
26
32
42

0
25
17
25
28

1
0
3
1
0
0
0
0
4
0

5564

0
2
1
0
0
1
1
1
2

0
1
8
1
1
2
6
11
12

0
1
1
2
0
3
6
9
7

1
3
1
1
1
4
5
6
6

0
3
3
2
0
2
0
6
5

0
0
2
0
1
2
4
1
3

0
1
4
4
3
4
10
2
6

3
2
2
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
10
0
2
0

2
17
0
0
0

6
7
1
1
0

4
3
1
3
1

1
1
1
2
0

1
1
1
1
0

6
38
64
1

77
200
313
20

45
204
292
32

21
124
191
26

15
65
97
20

5
35
52
19

1
2
9
11

374
454

3 710
4 825

5 268
5 489

5 565
5 301

4 603
4 643

3 274
3 329

2 029
2 070

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO

2.0
0.0

2.1
1.6
1.4

1.6
2.1
1.5
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.2
1.8
2.0
2.3
2.5

2.4
2.3
2.1
1.6
2.2
2.9
2.0
1.0

1.1
1.6
2.0
1.1

3.1
1.2
1.2

2.6
2.0
1.8
2.3
2.4
2.1
2.0

1.3
1.2
1.5
1.4
1.6
1.5
1.5
2.2
2.3
2.1
2.0

1.1
0.9
1.0
2.5
0.4

0.7
1.4
1.2
1.1
1.2

0.5

0.0
1.7
0.9
0.6
2.3
1.6
1.3
1.3
1.1

1.9
0.9
2.8
0.9
8.0

2.3

1.4
1.0
1.0
2.2

2.3
2.4

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

7$%/($1HZVPHDUSRVLWLYHFDVHQRWLILFDWLRQE\DJHDQGVH[
MALE

Republic of Korea

Samoa

Singapore

Solomon Islands

Tokelau

Tonga

Tuvalu

Vanuatu

Viet Nam

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010
1995
2000
2005
2010

27
19
22
22
0
0
0

1 131
821
687
537
1
3
4
1
9
8
8
11
14
13
14
16

1 613
1 085
1 171
705
1
1
0
1
40
9
25
21
6
4
18
18

1 425
988
1 326
1 049
1
1
1

1 207
853
1 336
1 496
0
1
1

1 225
901
1 669
1 997
2
1
0

60
34
61
38
5
8
9
16

62
51
94
105
7
8
15
8

1 307
731
1 005
1 029
3
2
0
1
70
26
96
86
9
10
12
3

0
0
1
1
0
1

0
0
1
0
1
0

0
0

0
0
1

0
1
2
2
0
0

2
0
0

0
1
1
1
1
1

0
2
5
0
3
0

0
0
2
1
4

1
6
7
4
6

0
2
5
5
3

0
5
1
5
1

1
1
3
10
0
5

1
2
4
5
4
2

0
0
2
1
0

51
54
59

2 367
3 408
3 205

6 147
7 105
7 036

8 209
8 738
7 851

6 713
8 606
8 564

5 150
4 958
5 790

7 712
7 573
6 248

0
1
0
0
2
3
4
4

0
0

UNKNOWN

014

1524

2534

3544

4554

5564

65+

46
25
27
23
1
0
0

908
546
590
472
2
2
2

863
544
842
686
2
1
0

296
220
370
487
0
0
0

8
9
5
15
17
15
23
19

18
8
20
21
11
13
21
17

408
295
373
368
1
0
1
1
19
5
20
21
13
5
9
4

867
795
1 729
2 216
1
0
0

1
1
0
1
3
8
9
4

431
393
491
509
0
1
2
2
21
7
33
26
7
7
12
11

0
0

0
1
1
1
0
1

0
1
1
0
0
0

0
0

0
0
0

0
0
1
2
0
1

0
1
0

0
2
1
2
0
1

0
1
1
0
0
0

0
0
5
0
3

1
0
5
3
5
5

1
0
15
1
3

0
2
7
2
3

0
3
3
4
5

2
0
0
3
1
3

0
0
1
2
1

64
47
53

1 334
1 747
1 870

2 320
2 293
2 454

2 754
2 116
1 681

2 594
2 298
1 864

2 847
2 023
1 863

4 907
4 604
3 751

3
94
64
118
120
3
6
11
3

22
9
29
21
12
7
11
5

UNKNOWN

3
31
16
43
44
0
2
1
5

MALE/FEMALE
RATIO
2.1
1.9
1.6
1.4
1.1
2.3
1.2
1.0
2.8
3.5
2.7
2.6
0.7
0.9
1.0
1.0

0.8
2.0
1.2
5.0
1.0

0.7
4.0
2.0
0.9
1.3
0.9

2.2
2.7
2.9

Western Pacic Region

Wallis and Futuna


Islands

FEMALE

YEAR

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

245

246

WHO REPORT 2011 | GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL

Data can be downloaded from www.who.int/tb/data

1.8

40

82
244

0.4
52
0

0
0
0
1.3

1.3

0.8

1.6
4.9

2.1
1.0
1.1

1.7

1.0
10.2
4.6
0.9

5.6
93

2.5
5.6

3.6

2.4

2.0

5.8
37
111

0.5
1.1
2.2

2.5

13
1.1
3.3
14
9.2

0.3
1.5
0.2
0.4
1.5

0
0
0
0.1

0.1
0.7

82
244

40

1.8

0.5
93

0
37
111

13
0.4
0.7
2.1
9.2

DST LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

LABORATORIES

CULTURE LABS
PER 5M
POPULATION

In country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country
In country

In country
In country

In country
Out of country
No
In country
Out of country
Out of country
Out of country

No

In country
Out of country

Out of country

In country
In country
No
Out of country
In country
In country
In country
Out of country
Out of country
No
Out of country
In country
Out of country

SECOND-LINE
DST
AVAILABLE

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes

Yes

Yes
No

Yes

No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No

NRL

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
No
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects

Yes, all suspects


Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
If TB is confirmed
Yes, all suspects
Yes, all suspects
Yes (other criteria)
For certain income groups
Yes, all suspects

TB DIAGNOSIS

Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes

Yes

Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

FIRST-LINE DRUGS

FREE THROUGH NTP

Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

No

Yes
Yes

No

Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

RIFAMPICIN USED
THROUGHOUT
TREATMENT

100

0
100
0
100
100

100
0

100
100
100
100
0

100

50

15
98

99

0
0
0
100
15
5
0
0
0
100
0
0
100

% OF PATIENTS
TREATED WITH FDCb

DRUG MANAGEMENT

a NRL = national reference laboratory


b FDC = fixed-dose combination
c NURSES (Registered Nurses, Registered Midwives, Enrolled Nurses, Enrolled Midwives); HEALTH ASSISTANTS (Medical Assistants, Clinical Officers); LABORATORY TECHNICIANS (Microscopists)

American Samoa
Australia
Brunei Darussalam
Cambodia
China
China, Hong Kong SAR
China, Macao SAR
Cook Islands
Fiji
French Polynesia
Guam
Japan
Kiribati
Lao People's Democratic
Republic
Malaysia
Marshall Islands
Micronesia (Federated States
of)
Mongolia
Nauru
New Caledonia
New Zealand
Niue
Northern Mariana Islands
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Republic of Korea
Samoa
Singapore
Solomon Islands
Tokelau
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu
Viet Nam
Wallis and Futuna Islands

SMEAR LABS
PER 100K
POPULATION

7$%/($/DERUDWRULHV173VHUYLFHVGUXJPDQDJHPHQWKXPDQUHVRXUFHVDQGLQIHFWLRQFRQWURO

Yes
No
Yes
No
No
No
Yes
Yes
No
No

Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes

Yes

No
Yes

No

No
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes

PAEDIATRIC
FORMULATIONS
PROCURED

60

100
100

80
100

100
75

30
0

100

75

60

70
100

20

50
100
80

50
90

20
30

100

85

2
50

100

100
60

NURSES

100

100

100
50

MEDICAL
OFFICERS

40

50
100

50
100

50
90

10

45
4

100

90

100

100
50

HEALTH
ASSISTANTS

60

100
100

50
100

20
90

22

5
50

100

100

100

100

100
60

LABORATORY
TECHNICIANS

% OF STAFF TRAINED BY THE NTP (IN 2010)c

0
0

111

192
0

200
233

1049

98
0

92

15

79

TB NOTIFICATION
RATE PER 100 000
HEALTH-CARE
WORKERS

The World Health Organization monitors


the global tuberculosis epidemic in support
of national TB control programmes.

For further information about tuberculosis contact:


Information Resource Centre HTM/STB
World Health Organization
20 Avenue Appia, 1211Geneva27, Switzerland
Email: tbdocs@who.int
Web site: www.who.int/tb
ISBN 978 92 4 156438 0

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